Rho Jae Oon

삼인문년三人問年 3 Men Questioning Time, 2011


Rho Jae Oon


Rho Jae Oon's works deal with the general methods through which visual cultures might be recognised and accommodated within society in digital era. It seems that rho attempt to narrow down any possible gaps between the contents of his work and the actual perceptions of viewers by using websites, such as his vimalaki.net, as a platform through which to show his creative output. When making actual exhibitions he tend to bring the virtual forms of his own mind or formats that resemble hard disks into the physical gallery space. Interestingly, the contents of his output bear a close relation to memories of warfare of recollected anecdotes about a divided country, as well as resembling movies and digital media in terms of form.

In contrast to 'new media art', which is more likely to be fallacious by virtue of its fetishising of the machine, Rho's works are of note in terms of the way in which they deal with types of media that condition the social imagination while at the same time liberation it. Using methods that range from  obscuring obvious cultural connotations to considering the 'recognition' of historical incidents as the Cold War or terrorism, as an Asian artist Rho seems to focus on his ultimately ambivalent feelings towards traditional cultures. In so doing, he also tries to mark a critical feature of technical media that might possibly be located between the two main issues surrounding media-centered discourse, namely 'the expention of the visual' and 'the reduction of indivisual experiences' of the visual. His works may serve to represent 'media nirvana', 'Buddhist nihilism' or be seen as striving to deliver the existential depths that might have occurred in young people who pass most of their time sitting in front of a conputer monitor.


Park Chan-Kyong (artist, critic, filmmaker)


_'Future Great', Art Review Asia, 2014