Daniel Jack Lyons: Days Change at Night marks the photographer’s first solo exhibition in Los Angeles, on view from June 28 to August 1, 2026 at NOON Projects. The show gathers work built through long-term contact, with Lyons returning to the same people over months and years rather than treating photography as a one-time encounter.
Trained as an anthropologist, Lyons brings that background into the way he works. He spends time with his subjects, shares meals, listens, and allows trust to develop before making photographs. That process shapes the images on view. They carry a sense of familiarity and patience, with portraits and scenes that feel grounded in lived relationships rather than quick observation.
Lyons has focused much of his practice on marginalized youth and on communities living at the edges of social visibility, often in places marked by conflict or pressure. The work shown here reflects that interest through photographs that are direct but measured, attentive to gesture, setting and presence. Instead of broad statements, the images hold on to individual faces, small interactions and the details that reveal how people live inside changing circumstances.
Born in 1981, Lyons has shown work internationally in cities including Paris, Melbourne, New York, Milan, Amsterdam, Warsaw, London and Maputo. His photographs have also appeared in the
New York Times,
i-D,
The New Yorker and
Vogue Italia. That range points to a practice that moves easily between gallery, editorial and documentary contexts while keeping a consistent focus on human connection.
At NOON Projects,
Days Change at Night presents that approach with clarity. The exhibition treats photography as a form of sustained attention, where the image comes out of time spent rather than speed, and where the act of looking is tied closely to trust.
Image:
© Daniel Jack Lyons