Room 1

Figures In Flight (and Falling) (2023) 1/2 + A.P.

80 x 62.5” layered resin print on paper

This large format 2.5D piece reveals the wireframe structure of the two embracing figures depicted in the life-scale extended reality sculpture, Encounter

Fragments (2024) 1/1 no A.P.

28 x 21” collage using pigment prints on archival metallic paper

34 camera phone photographs of Encounter, assembled with sewing pins and glue

A Slim Volume of Poetry in No Particular Order, II (2021) 1/3 + A.P

24 x 38”, pigment print on archival paper

Photograph of a temporary installation of a broken mirror in Venice, CA.

MirrorMirror: The Reflective Surface in Contemporary Art, Dr. Michael Petry, published by Thames & Hudson (display copy only).

Featured: A Slim Volume of Poetry in No Particular Order, I and A DisAppearance (on computer screen).

Encounter Reflected (2025) 1/1 + A.P. (not pictured)

6 x 12’ extended reality sculpture, QR code

Exhibiting February 20 in West Hollywood as part of new version of Encounter.

Room 2

Cryptomnesia (2021) 1/1 + A.P.

36 x 96” multi-panel lenticular work, photography, digital collage

The View In Color (2021) 1/1 + A.P.

36 x 96” multi-panel lenticular work, photography, digital collage

Don’t You Wish You Were On The Other Side of The Glass (2022-2025)

Nine 22 x 17” archival pigment prints on metallic paper from a series of approximately one hundred (and counting) digitally modified photographs taken in windows

001-009 pictured 1/3 + A.P.

Between Stations We Stand (2021) A.P.

36 x 96” multi-panel lenticular work, broken mirror, photography, digital collage

Artist proof for a 48 x 96” lenticular

Video: Don’t You Wish You Were On The Other Side of The Glass (2025)

Selection of over 80 images from the series on a 77” vertical screen

Video: Don’t You Wish You Were On The Other Side of The Glass (2025)

Selection of over 80 images from the series on a 77” vertical screen

Mirror Mirror: The Reflective Surface in Contemporary Art Published in November by Thames & Hudson, Dr.Michael Petry surveys the work of contemporary artists working with reflections.

"David Van Eyssen was a well known new media creator when he became ill. He has said that ‘During several years of cancer treatment, I took photographs of myself with my phone, recording surgeries and side-effects, and using the camera to confirm my existence.’ In recovery, he has gone on to explore his self portraiture practice. For his series, A Slim Volume of Poetry In No Particular Order, he temporarily installed and broke large mirrors across Los Angeles. These startling works hide as much as document, and the viewer must work hard to seek him out. The violence stilled in the fractured image has a clear bodily parallel. Using AI techniques in DisAppearance, sections around the edges of four self portraits were extended until the figures recede into an imagined vista."

Don't You Wish You Were On The Other Side of The Glass is a collection of photographs of the witnessing self, taken over a two year period in London and Los Angeles.

"I wanted this series of pictures to act as bridge between street photography and self portraiture.

For many of the images, I’m looking for ways to block or erase parts of my face and body because I want to move away from conventional self-portraiture as much as possible, and because I’m interested in the transformation of the self, and how to communicate that visually. The window surface, and how light strikes it, is key to this, and so the texture of the glass is important — how clean or weathered it is, or whether it’s been graffitied on.

In other images, while there's usually some distortion of the face or figure — even the appearance of amputation in some cases — it’s more about the space, and where the subject stands in it. That tells us something else about the figure — how present or distant it is. Reflecting the street into the area behind the window creates a liminal space, and the entire image becomes the subject. I think of these photographs as containing a figure, not self-portraits that makes the figure the subject.”

Always Departing, Returning Again is an installation video work that explores the plasticity of time. As direction, duration, and orientation of the images fluctuates, it becomes increasingly difficult to determine which direction the passenger is traveling in. Memories of the passenger, in the form of shadow images, intersect with the sequence on the train, adding a dimension of unconscious time.