SHOWCASE

/ ARTIST / 2026

ARTIST: medmedmedss
COUNTRY: Thailand
CONTACT: www.instagram.com/medmedmedss
Hi! My name is Medsai, or medmedmedss. I'm an illustrator and graphic designer based in Bangkok. My work is inspired by nature, home objects, and imaginary things that live somewhere between memory and daydreams. Through wobbly lines and playful forms, I enjoy creating small worlds where thoughts slowly turn into things.

The Little Living Room - Key Visual for MunMunHappeningArtFest

Created as the key visual for MunMunHappeningArtFest, The Little Living Room imagines a small shared space filled with everyday objects, conversations, music, and creative moments. Inspired by the feeling of gathering in a friend's living room, the work explores how ordinary domestic spaces can become places for connection, making, and community.

Creatures Vase Parade

Part of the Thought & Thing exhibition, this series continues the exploration of domestic objects through imagination and play. Familiar vase forms are transformed into strange characters and sculptural creatures, blurring the boundary between furniture, decoration, and living companions

Tiny Treasure Shelf

This piece was inspired by the objects I remember seeing in my grandmother's home, mixed with imagined treasures and collected memories. Later, I turned the illustration into an interactive sticker set that allows people to remove objects from the shelf and create their own arrangements and stories.

Sarong exploration for Aprilpoolday

This sarong design was inspired by traditional batik patterns mixed with objects from the sea. Corals, shells, palm trees, waves, and tropical forms come together to create an imagined landscape inspired by summer and coastal memories.

Quick Sketch Collection

These sketches were displayed during my Thought & Thing exhibition to show part of my thinking process. I often use quick drawings as a way to brainstorm with myself — putting ideas down quickly before they eventually become objects, paintings, or larger works.

Wall Hanger Collection

This series was created for my Thought & Thing exhibition. Using acrylic on plywood, I transformed everyday motifs such as suns, vases, birds, and imaginary creatures into wall pieces that sit somewhere between decoration, sculpture, and illustration.
Technique: Acrylic on plywood

Shine & Rain Concert merchandise design for Whal & Dolph

A double-sided blanket illustration created for Whal & Dolph's Shine & Rain concert. Using watercolor as the main medium, I explored the atmosphere of sunshine and rainfall as two different emotional landscapes, translating them into soft textures, colors, and dreamlike imagery.

A Table Where Things Glow

This piece imagines a table where ordinary objects quietly come to life after dark. Lamps, candles, fruits, flowers, and small treasures gather together to create a scene that feels both familiar and magical. It continues my interest in the emotional life of everyday objects and the small rituals that happen around them.

Vase & Lamp Collection Poster

I've always loved home objects, especially vases and lamps. This project began as a collection of sketches that I kept in separate sketchbooks dedicated to each object type.
Over time, the pages slowly filled with shapes, details, and forms that existed only in my imagination — almost like a visual brain dump of ideas that kept appearing in my head.
Later, I gathered them together and turned them into these two posters: a small catalog of imaginary vases and lamps. Some of these drawings eventually found their way into physical objects, becoming part of my Thought & Thing exhibition, which explored the journey of ideas moving from thoughts into things.

Palm, Sun & Chair

Created as part of my Thought & Thing exhibition, this series explores the relationship between everyday objects and imagination through paintings on plywood.
The piece on the left began with the image of a palm tree, while the piece on the right imagines a chair growing out of a palm tree. Together, these works explore how familiar objects and memories can shift, combine, and transform inside my head before becoming images.
Like many works in the exhibition, these paintings sit somewhere between observation and imagination — small thoughts that eventually found their way into physical form.
Technique: Acrylic on plywood