1880 THAT: Christine Sun Kim and Thomas Mader

Stop 7/11: Running Gag

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A framed drawing of rows of noses in a grid format. All the noses have clouds of air puffing out of the nostrils except the one in the bottom right corner which is slightly apart and drawn in profile with not puffing out air.

This work is called 'Running Gag'. 

It is a framed pencil drawing about a metre square. The drawing depicts 254 noses drawn in cartoon style, in 17 rows. The bottom rows represent the 164 participants who attended the Milan Conference. They are drawn in monochrome pencil lines. 

All the noses apart from one are drawn with a condescending snort, or puff of air coming out of the nostrils. This is meant to represent the disdain that the majority of attendees had towards sign language.  

At the bottom right of the drawing, the only nose that is not snorting represents the one Deaf person who attended the conference, an American teacher called James Denison.  

The additional rows of noses towards the top of the drawing change from monochrome pencil lines to shades of green. It is the same pale hospital green that appears in the previous artwork.  It was chosen by the artists to allude to the medical perspective on deafness. These noses symbolise the followers of the oral system who long after the conference ended, continued to suppress sign language education.

The noses seem to float out of frame at the top of the picture in order to demonstrate the ongoing effects of the conference that are still felt today.

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