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Thai artist Jiab Prachakul is a compelling figurative painter because she makes quiet moments feel cinematic without turning them into melodrama. Born in Nakhon Phanom, Thailand, trained first in film, and self-taught as a painter, she often builds paintings from memory, photographs, friendship, and the emotional weather of diasporic life. This scene grew from time spent in Sauzon, Belle-Île-en-Mer, and its mood is about the charged space between people who know each other well. 

In bright coastal daylight, two women crouch on a pale quay beside still blue water. The woman at left turns away from us, her short dark bob and clear glasses outlined against the sky. She wears a loose white top and white trousers with dark socks and heavy black boots, her posture compact and inward. At right, a second woman in a sheer black top and dark cropped trousers crouches on the balls of her feet, also in sturdy black boots. Her blunt fringe and lightened hair ends catch the sun. Hoop earrings and sharply modeled cheekbones add to her alert, stylish presence. Between them, her hands extend forward and folding over one another. To their left are two wine glasses. A small boat drifts at left, while a lighthouse sits at the end of a long breakwater. Gold sparks of reflected sunlight skip across the water as the women’s shadows stretch behind them.

The title promises easy intimacy, but the painting gives something subtler: companionship with room for privacy, glamour edged with thoughtfulness, and closeness that does not erase individuality. Prachakul’s attention to clothing, pose, and gesture makes identity feel lived rather than symbolic. The lighthouse and harbor suggest navigation, pause, and emotional bearings. This work also expands who inhabits contemporary painting with elegance, sensitivity, and psychological depth. It is not just a picture of two stylish women by the sea. It is a study in how relationships can be tender, self-possessed, and slightly mysterious all at once.

Thai artist Jiab Prachakul is a compelling figurative painter because she makes quiet moments feel cinematic without turning them into melodrama. Born in Nakhon Phanom, Thailand, trained first in film, and self-taught as a painter, she often builds paintings from memory, photographs, friendship, and the emotional weather of diasporic life. This scene grew from time spent in Sauzon, Belle-Île-en-Mer, and its mood is about the charged space between people who know each other well. In bright coastal daylight, two women crouch on a pale quay beside still blue water. The woman at left turns away from us, her short dark bob and clear glasses outlined against the sky. She wears a loose white top and white trousers with dark socks and heavy black boots, her posture compact and inward. At right, a second woman in a sheer black top and dark cropped trousers crouches on the balls of her feet, also in sturdy black boots. Her blunt fringe and lightened hair ends catch the sun. Hoop earrings and sharply modeled cheekbones add to her alert, stylish presence. Between them, her hands extend forward and folding over one another. To their left are two wine glasses. A small boat drifts at left, while a lighthouse sits at the end of a long breakwater. Gold sparks of reflected sunlight skip across the water as the women’s shadows stretch behind them. The title promises easy intimacy, but the painting gives something subtler: companionship with room for privacy, glamour edged with thoughtfulness, and closeness that does not erase individuality. Prachakul’s attention to clothing, pose, and gesture makes identity feel lived rather than symbolic. The lighthouse and harbor suggest navigation, pause, and emotional bearings. This work also expands who inhabits contemporary painting with elegance, sensitivity, and psychological depth. It is not just a picture of two stylish women by the sea. It is a study in how relationships can be tender, self-possessed, and slightly mysterious all at once.

“Girlfriends” by Jiab Prachakul (Thai) - Acrylic on linen / 2022 - North Carolina Museum of Art (Raleigh, North Carolina) #WomenInArt #JiabPrachakul #Prachakul #NCMA #NorthCarolinaMuseumofArt #art #artText #arte #ThaiArt #ThaiArtist #AsianArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #WomenPaintingWomen

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