Eyelight, 2002, archival inkjet prints with lenticular lenses, dimensions variable
Eyelight is a series of animated lenticular photographs that investigate the subjectivity of vision. As viewers move, the images move with them—mutating, transforming, and reacting at the pace of the body. Two people standing in the same gallery do not see the same image, even while looking at the same piece. Based on the moon’s reflection in water, the works function somewhere between photography and video, with the viewer controlling the movement between frames like the hand crank of a nineteenth-century projector.