The California-born, Berlin-based artist Christine Sun Kim (b. 1980) explores concepts of sound, its visual representations, and how it is valued in society from her perspective as part of the Deaf community. Rooted in such visual communication systems as musical notation, televisual captioning, infographics, and American Sign Language (ASL), Kim’s work explores a broad conceptual terrain, from questioning the implicit authority of spoken over signed language, to considering the traumatic encounters, systemic marginalization, and impact of casual ignorance inflicted upon the Deaf community.
In this site-specific mural, Stacking Traumas (2021), Kim identifies three sources of traumatic experience, represented by three tables stacked on top of one another. The bottom table denotes “dinner table syndrome,” the feeling of frustration that grows out of being surrounded by non-signing hearing people at social events. The dinner table—a symbol of family life and bonding—often represents inaccessibility to Deaf people, especially for children whose family members never learned to sign. The middle table represents “hearing people anxiety,” a sense of worry and inferiority triggered by language difference and cultural tensions imposed by hearing people. The top table, positioned high up the Kemper Art Museum’s tall, curved atrium wall, presents the name of Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor, scientist, and eugenicist who vociferously opposed teaching sign language to Deaf children. As the artist describes it, his name literally looms over the heads of visitors, giving volume to a specter that continues to affect the lives of Deaf people.
The stacked tables double as monumentally elongated musical notes, and the extended character of the lines references the format of the musical staff. The overall work conveys the artist’s diagrammatic interpretation of states of emotion while showing the cumulative layers of connection among these traumatic concepts. Both personal and political, Kim’s mural deftly calls attention to the frustrations, obstacles, and stigmas attached to deafness while also promoting awareness and accountability.