Installation view © Atelier Hermès

In this solo exhibition, Rho Jae Oon presents a reinterpretation of the story of Maudgalyayana (Mokuren 末献連), one of the Buddha's ten principal disciples and the protagonist of the Buddhist scripture, linking it to contemporary society through various interfaces.


Installation view © Atelier Hermès

The scripture tells the story of Maudgalyayana (Mulian) rescuing his mother who had fallen into hell. Rooted in the East Asian ethical value of filial piety (故), and involving the salvation of a wicked mother—a potentially subversive narrative—the tale reflects a universal human archetype of redemption. In this exhibition, Rho connects the story of Mulian to a broader artistic and philosophical inquiry into modern-day suffering—disease, hunger, and the concept of hell.

Transforming this narrative into a visual and cinematic interface or suspense, the exhibition reconfigures hell not as a traditional image, but as a space that corresponds to contemporary reality dominated by film, computer graphics, the internet, and augmented reality. Viewers become potential Mulians themselves, traveling and wandering through a kind of hyper-inferno (地獄).

Throughout this journey, the audience is invited to confront hunger, disease, catastrophe, and miracles; to experience the transience, humor, and intensity of desire; and to encounter or witness mutated forms of nature driven by technological excess. Of course, each viewer may also discover or contribute their own new visions of hell.

References