Stylepor (STYLEPOR_) is a Thai street artist / character illustrator and visual creator, best known for a playful flower-headed character. A blend of pop culture, street art, and fashion, and leans into bright, feel-good, positive-energy visuals.
👩🎨 @myrtilletibayrenc 📍 Rose 🌹 Hotel 🏨 Bangkok 🇹🇭 #thailand First mural I found yesterday as I explored the Silom area. Further research on this mural indicates there was controversy surrounding the original piece (last two photos,) so it was changed to deer 🦌… From artist’s IG page: the original piece with nude men.
I personally wish the first rendition would have remained. Interesting to learn, though, the kind of public art that gets censored here…
Two guardians. One calm. One furious. Painted to stand watch long after the doors forget who last passed through.
Qin Shubao (left, calmer expression) • A legendary Tang dynasty general • Often painted with a gentler face, thoughtful or composed • Represents loyalty, righteousness, moral strength • Keeps internal harmony — protects what’s already inside
Yuchi Gong (right, fierce expression) • Another Tang dynasty general, usually paired with Qin Shubao • Painted dark-skinned, wide-eyed, aggressive • Represents physical protection and intimidation • Keeps external threats away
Together, they form a balance: calm + fury · restraint + force · wisdom + violence (only when needed) ⸻ Why they’re on doors in Bangkok
Bangkok’s Chinese communities (especially in Yaowarat / Talad Noi / Bang Rak) brought this tradition with them: • Painted on temple doors, clan shrines, old shop-houses • Meant to block evil spirits, bad luck, jealousy, and chaos • Doors = spiritual thresholds → guardians are posted there
The fact that these are painted directly on weathered wooden doors (not printed, not restored) tells you: • This is likely old, or at least done in an old-school style • It’s meant to age, peel, crack — protection that lives in time ⸻ • Mineral-style pigments (reds, greens, golds) • Layered armor textures • Calligraphic patterns embedded in clothing • Faces painted with emotion, not symmetry
This isn’t tourist art. It’s functional spiritual art — meant to work, not just look nice.