Loy Krathong: The River Remembers

Every year, on the full moon of the twelfth lunar month, people gather by rivers and lakes to float beautiful offerings — krathongs made of banana leaves, flowers, and candles — in a ceremony to honor the Goddess of Water, Phra Mae Khongkha.
It is both a prayer and a release: letting go of negativity, seeking forgiveness, and welcoming renewal.

This series reimagines that ritual through a symbolic lens — transforming the act of letting go into five visual meditations on beauty, faith, and environmental awareness.

Each artwork is created with love — love for Thai culture, nature, and the sacred water that connects us all.
May our traditions continue to shine beautifully, while we protect the environment that sustains them.
Let us honor the river not only with offerings, but with responsibility.

 


Blessings to the River

In this opening image, a woman adorned in blossoms releases petals into the water.
Her gesture symbolizes offering and renewal — a prayer rising from the heart toward the heavens.
Each flower carries gratitude, each droplet reflects light — together, they honor the sacred bond between humanity and the river.


Release of Anger

A woman cloaked in gold kneels in the water as fire surrounds her.
The flames represent anger, grief, and all destructive emotions we release into the river.
Through surrender, she transforms pain into light — a ritual of purification and rebirth.


Release of the Serpent

Here, a serene woman gently faces a glimmering serpent.
The serpent symbolizes danger and fear — yet also wisdom and protection.
By releasing it into the water, she prays for safety from harm and calamity, trusting that what is wild can coexist with what is sacred.


Release of the Stones

Dark stones rise and scatter from her hands into the air.
They embody confusion, ignorance, and attachment — the illusions we hold too tightly.
In letting them go, she finds clarity and peace, as the river carries away her shadows.


The Goddess and the Waste

A divine figure, embodying the Water Goddess herself, sits among discarded flowers and debris underwater.
The scene questions the contradiction between beauty and pollution — the ritual’s grace versus its environmental consequence.
It asks: when our offerings harm the very river we honor, can we still call it devotion?

Artist’s Reflection : “This series is not a critique — it is a mirror.
Every offering we make carries both light and shadow.
We float our hopes upon the river, but the river remembers everything we release.”