Exhibition Information
The mother is smoking, and the baby in her stomach is exposed as a human experiment photo and suffocated by cigarette smoke in the womb. Smoking is a risk of birth to deformed babies!" There's a picture of a cigarette box with friendly captions. This is the hell of a contemporary. Can't you imagine the self-pity, the guilt that strikes at the same time as childbirth, the grief of the whole family? As the population grows, the society in question will require more resources and "unnecessary" burdens to support them. On the other hand, as a creature, you may feel a serious sense of crisis in your ability to self-replicate by sexual choice. So that image displays the aversion and repulsion of 'deformed childbirth' and orders a firm exclusion from the outbreak. It is a proven methodology that explicitly presents a suffering human image to eradicate the "sin" of smoking. The alertness felt by the Buddhist monk who first read the scene, and the emotional nature of the noble lady who fainted after seeing Bosch's "Garden of Pleasure" are no different from what we feel when we see that helldo. And this imagination usually functions as a guide for some purpose.