Stephen Wilkes: Day to Night, presented at Gilman Contemporary from July 31 through August 31, 2026, brings together works from the celebrated photographer’s landmark series examining the passage of time through a single image. Known for merging documentary observation with technical experimentation, Wilkes has spent more than a decade redefining the possibilities of landscape and cityscape photography. His monumental compositions compress entire days into one seamless frame, allowing sunrise, daylight, dusk, and night to coexist within the same photograph.
For the
Day to Night series, Wilkes often remained in one location for up to 36 hours, capturing thousands of exposures from a fixed vantage point. These images were then meticulously combined into panoramic scenes that challenge conventional ideas of photographic time. Rather than documenting a single decisive moment, Wilkes constructs visual narratives that unfold gradually across the frame. Crowded urban intersections, national parks, beaches, and architectural landmarks become studies of movement, rhythm, and human activity observed over the course of an entire day.
Born in New York in 1957,
Stephen Wilkes first gained widespread recognition through documentary projects focused on American life and historical spaces. His long-term work on the abandoned medical wards of Ellis Island drew national attention and contributed to renewed preservation efforts at the site. Over the years, his photographs have appeared in major publications including
National Geographic, where his exploration of time and environment found an international audience. His images balance technical precision with emotional accessibility, transforming familiar locations into immersive visual experiences.
The exhibition also includes more recent experiments in multiple exposure photography, in which Wilkes layers fleeting moments directly in-camera onto textile surfaces. Unlike the extensive digital construction of
Day to Night, these newer works are created within seconds, capturing impressions that feel instinctive and painterly. Together, the photographs reflect Wilkes’ ongoing interest in memory, perception, and the emotional dimension of seeing.
At Gilman Contemporary,
Stephen Wilkes: Day to Night offers viewers an opportunity to experience photography not as a frozen instant, but as an expansive meditation on time itself.
Image:
Stephen Wilkes
Four Seasons, Central Park, NY, 2024 © Stephen Wilkes, courtesy of Gilman Contemporary