I first entered the cloister of Wat Phra Kaew on a November morning. The Ramakien murals rose in every direction — each panel its own palace, its own battle, all in the elevated bird’s-eye perspective that refuses Western vanishing points entirely.
The Grammar of Vermilion and Gold
Court painters from the 1780s understood something European fresco never grasped: a wall is not a window. Vermilion marks divine authority. Gold-leaf traces weapon edges and halos. Emerald jade belongs to the naga kings who guard every palace foundation beneath the painted sea.
A wall is not a window. It is a scroll you read with your feet, panel by panel, for an hour or a lifetime.
Generations of restorers repainted these panels every few decades with the same mineral pigments ground on the same stone palettes. The cracks are not damage — they are time made visible, the wall insisting on its own age and its refusal to ever be finished.