Chromatic Aberration

Film Maker
Satz, Aura
Year
2014
Country
U.K.
Language
Format
Digital
Length
8
Genre
documentary, experimental, hand-processed
Category
Abstraction, cameraless, Landscape, media studies, Memory, Photography, Sound Art + Music, spirituality, Work by Women

‘Chromatic Aberration’ is a film which explores the early technologies of colour filmmaking drawn from the archives of George Eastman House, Rochester, New York. Featuring vibrant close-ups of eyes from fledgling archival experiments in colour film, Chromatic Aberration turns the cinematic lens in on itself: from the prosthetic recording eye of the camera, to an evocation of the abstract inner screen of one’s eyelids. Satz has drawn inspiration from a scene in Powell and Pressberger’s 1946 film ‘A Matter of Life and Death’, where the transition from the reality of colour to the black and white of the afterworld is conveyed from the viewpoint of David Niven’s eyelid, from inside the body, behind the eyes. Early 1920s colour film footage – mainly tests shots featuring members of George Eastman’s family as well as Hollywood stars of the time – is shot in such a way so as to reveal the inherent chromatic fringing, distortion and misalignment. Using specialist equipment at the BFI National Archive, London, the footage is reworked through the use of extreme close-up and magnification, honing in on the eyes.

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