Skip to main content

...These Blazeing Starrs!

Deborah Stratman

2011 00:14:14 United StatesEnglishB&WStereo4:316mm film

Description

Since comets have been recorded, they've augured catastrophe, messiahs, upheaval and end times. A short film about these meteoric ice-cored fireballs and their historic ties to divination that combines imagery of 15th-18th Century European broadsides with NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory footage.

...These Blazeing Starrs! juxtaposes a modern empirical desire to probe and measure against older methods, when we translated the sky to predict human folly. These days, comets are understood as time capsules harboring elemental information about the formation of our solar system. We smash rockets into them to read spectral signatures. In a sense, the remain oracles — it's just the manner of divining which has changed.

...These Blazeing Starrs!

Threaten the World

with Famine, Plague, & Warrs:

To Princes, Death:

to Kingdoms, many Crosses:

To all Estates, inevitable Losses!

To Herds-men, Rot'

to Plowmen, haples Seasons:

To Saylors, Storms;

to Cittyes, Civil Treasons.

— Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas, 1578

About Deborah Stratman

Filmmaker Deborah Stratman works in a territory between experimental and documentary genres.  In her films and frequent work in other media, including drawing, sculpture, sound, photography and small press, she explores the history, uses, mythologies and control of highly varied landscapes, from Muslim Xinjiang China to suburban southern California. Her recent work addresses American constructs of Freedom, the junction between technology and faith and contemporary locations of the supernatural. Stratman teaches in the School of Art & Design at the University of Illinois in Chicago.

Stratman was the subject of a mid-career retrospective,The Thing Unnamed, at MoMA New York in 2013.