You held a style that was all your own, as Eraserhead proved in spades, and that uniqueness, that defiance of artistic conformity with all of its weird, Wizard of Oz trim, carried throughout your specialized career.
The Elephant Man, which became an irrefutable classic, sealed your status, followed by the epic, Dune (one that's aged far better than some, including yourself, dared predict), Blue Velvet, Wild at Heart, Lost Highway, The Straight Story, Mulholland Drive, Inland Empire and My Son, My Son, What Have You Done? (a collaboration, no less, with contemporary visionary, Werner Herzog). These features, in turn, were accompanied by your sporadic shorts and serialized experiments: Dumbland, Rabbits and On the Air (ah, such rich, surreal stuff).
Then there's Twin Peaks, the oddest of murder-mystery shows, which grew supernatural through its progression, only to deliver a science-fiction punch. Thereafter, its theatrical prequel, Fire Walk With Me, and Showtime's sequel series, The Return, drove home your saga's unconventional blend to brave, new, unexpected heights.
You were an amazing, avant-garde painter, too, with the fruits of your labor spotlighted in David Lynch: The Art Life. (To hear you reflect and watch you create propels a sensation that can't be tapped anywhere else.)
And as an actor, you went on to redefine your precious quirks, in particular as Twin Peaks' FBI Deputy Director Gordon Cole, but also in Steven Spielberg's The Fabelmans (as the legendary John Ford), Lucky (with Wild at Heart/Twin Peaks/The Straight Story's Harry Dean Stanton), Zelly and Me (with Blue Velvet/Wild at Heart's Isabella Rossellini), Lumiere and Company, My Beautiful Broken Brain, Girlfriend's Day, European Nights, Barracuda, Heart Beat, Nadja ... and A Fall From Grace.
You were a quiet yet forceful man of discerning taste, who took to Pennsylvanian texture and grave, factory grime. In other words, you invested your heart and soul into all that you touched, with a body of work that no one can ever emulate or top: a vast, unorthodox assemblage that will only grow greater over time.