INFO





Chanon Sringkaranan
c.sringkaranan@gmail.com
07494141323

Chanon Sringkaranan is a visual designer and filmmaker based in London. He recently completed an MA in Visual Communication at the Royal College of Art, where his practice explored memory, belonging, and storytelling through image-making, and interactive design.

His creative path began in Thailand, where he
worked as a freelance director and assistant director on music videos, commercials, and still-photo advertisements with leading production companies. He later joined White Fox under GMM Music as a Junior Creative Editor, focusing on campaigns, image-making, and social media content for artists. Along the way, he has also collaborated with international brands such as HOKA and contributed to concert visual design projects.

Today, Chanon’s work moves fluidly between
commercial production and experimental design.
He combines narrative, atmosphere, and tactile processes—ranging from publication design to cyanotype printing to create multidisciplinary projects that connect personal experience with wider visual culture.

CONTACT
CV





Education
MA-arts,Visual Communication, 
Royal Collage Of Art, London
(1 year)

BFA-Fine and applied arts,
Communication Design Program, 
Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok
(4 years)


Vajiravudh College, Bangkok
(9 years)

Otago Boys High School, Dunedin
(2 years)




Employment WhiteFox Music Lable, GMM Music 
Junior creative editor
2023 - 2024

Adhoc House, Freelance
Director / Assistance Director 
2022-2024

HUB HO HIN BANGKOK
Intern
2021

XD 49
Intern
2019

YIMSAMER
Intern
2016



Skills
Workshop
Image Making
Cyanotype Printing
Publication Design
Social Media Campiagn
Interactive & Web Design
Concert Visual/Set Design
Music Video & Ad Direction
Lighting/ Installation Design.




Personal Projects
Director / Editor
Alone Together (Short Film)
2022 

Designer / Exhibitor in Bangkok Design Week By Commde Student Union
2020 

Head Of Production / Exhibitor For Faculty Of Architectures Events
2020 

Head Of  Motion Graphic Designer / Production Staff  
Faculty Of Architectures Events 
2019 

Exhibitor In Bangkok Design Week 
2019








Last Updated 24.10.31
BACKTO : SELECTED WORKS / Recent Project Details







Recent Project
Everything that happens will happen today
Participatory Work/ Booklet (2025)
The Royal College of Art

This project explores the meaning of home as something layered, shifting, and deeply personal. Through tactile objects, participatory workshops, and printed booklets, it creates opportunities for reflection on memory and belonging.

The work began with remaking objects tied to memory such as a family wind chime and experimenting with material processes like cyanotype, photo transfer, and embedding images into objects. These hand-made gestures act as vessels for fragmented recollections, bridging past and present.

At its heart, the project is participatory: a workshop and booklet guide participants through tracing, writing, and storytelling with personal objects. These activities open a space for dialogue, helping people reconnect with formative experiences and rethink what “home” means in their lives today.







Affinities Presentation

Everything that happens will happened today
Supporting Materials / 2025 Submission
The Royal College of Art

This 10-minute presentation offers an overview of my practice and the research that shaped my recent project. In the video, I introduce the themes I work with—memory, belonging, and the feeling of home—and explain how tactile processes, object-based storytelling, and multisensory methods guide my approach. I walk through key projects, the materials I work with, and the ideas behind creating participatory experiences that help people reconnect with formative memories and personal spaces.






Selected Process Documents

Everything that happens will happened today
Supporting Materials / 2025 Submission
The Royal College of Art

A record of how the project developed through questions, experiments, materials, moving images, and workshop testing. These documents show how each stage shaped the next, turning reflection into a practical method for exploring memory and belonging.





© CHANON SRINGKARANAN ARCHIVE