Phaptawan Suwannakudt


Phaptawan Suwannakudt is a Thai artist based in Sydney and Bangkok.
Suwannakudt primarily works with traditional Thai mural painting, and has been involved in numerous public projects and a series of individual artworks. Her works are exhibited widely in Paris, Bangkok, Tokyo, Melbourne, Manila, including Sydney Biennale, Bangkok Art biennale, Jakarta biennale, and documenta 15. She was one of the co-founding artists of Womanifesto, an international art exchange program focusing on women artists, established in Thailand in 1995.
In her work, Suwannakudt explores art as a means to connect and communicate with individuals through the process of storytelling that transcends boundaries of language, identity, and temporality.

Early life and education

Suwannakudt was born in 1959 in Thailand. She graduated from Suksanaree High School in Bangkok in 1977, and obtained a B.A. degree majoring in English and minoring in German in Silpakorn University in 1980. In 2006, she earned a Master of Visual Arts from the Sydney College of the Arts, University of Sydney.
Her father, Paiboon Suwannakudt, or Tan Kudt, was also an artist who worked in Thai style. When she was a child, they would travel around Thailand to visit Buddhist temples. Informed by her upbringing in a Theravada Buddhist society, which sees women as lesser in material and spiritual value compared to men, Suwannakudt's practice offers a personal mediation of the everyday experiences and emotions of women under a patriarchal culture.

Career

For 12 years from 1970 to 1981, Suwannakudt was a painting apprentice to her father Paiboon Suwannakudt, who taught her how to illustrate Buddhist narratives, as well as encouraged her artistic ambitions and literary pursuits. Graduated with an English degree, she became an E.S.L. teacher for Indo-Chinese refugees at Pragmatics Company Ltd., a UNHCR Project, in 1981.
In 1982, Suwannakudt began to pursue a career as a painter after her father's death at age 57, when she was asked to complete his unfinished Grand Staircase mural at the Anantara Siam Bangkok Hotel. From 1984 to 1986, she continued to organise and lead the Tan Kudt Group of painters in making temple and hotel murals, most notably the murals at the Bangkok Peninsula Hotel. She became one of the first women to paint temple murals in Thailand, thus inverting gender and age-based hierarchies within traditional mural practice.
After migrating to Australia in 1996, Suwannakudt continued to challenge her practice as a mural painter, as well as explore her own cultural and ethnic identity in a new environment. She was also an artist in residence in Bundanon Trust, residential Studio Grant in January in 2003, as well as in The Womanifesto International Collaborative Programme at Rai Boonbandarn, North East Thailand in 2008.

Selected exhibitions and works

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions

Leave it and Break no Hearts, with Samak Kosem, 100 Tonson Foundation, Bangkok UN/THAID, Grau Projekt, Melbourne Between Suns, Cement Fondu, Sydney, curated by Megan Monte Study for Knowledge in your Hands, Eyes and Mind, Cement Fondu, Sydney Traces of Words, Museum of Anthropology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver Beauty and Myth of Southeast Asia, Thienny Lee Gallery, Sydney Thresholds: Contemporary Thai Art, Sundaram Tagore Gallery, New York

Temple murals and other Buddhist works

  • A Buddhist Series of Tree and Flower Allegories
  • An alter painting of the Buddha in meditation commissioned by the Zen Centre, Annandale for its Gorricks' Run meditation temple
  • Lives of the Buddha in Sydney executed and completed in Sydney

Biennales

  • Sleeping Deep Beauty, Jakarta Biennale
  • Knowledge in your hands, eyes, and minds, Beyond Bliss: Inaugural Bangkok Art Biennale, Bangkok
  • Not for Sure, 18th Sydney Biennale