Ryan McGinley: Night Shift places New York at the center of McGinley’s latest series, on view from June 13 to August 8, 2026 at Jeffrey Deitch on Wooster Street. The exhibition turns the city into both setting and subject, with photographs made overnight across all five boroughs during 2025.
Shot between 9 p.m. and 5 a.m., the series uses slow shutter, long lens and radio flash to pull bodies, streets and light into the same frame. McGinley’s New York appears at once familiar and altered: fire hydrants steam in summer heat, cherry blossoms break through pavement, smoke rises from manholes, and landmarks such as the K Bridge, Fort Greene Park, Lincoln Center and Coney Island take on a new kind of charge after dark. Neon and brake lights blur into the pictures, giving the work a restless, luminous look.
The exhibition reaches back to McGinley’s early practice, when his photographs connected skate, graffiti and queer subculture with a direct point-and-shoot style. It also reflects the longer arc of his work, from the road trip images that made him widely known to his continued focus on the body in motion and the spaces it passes through. Here, that interest returns to the city that shaped him, with New York treated less as backdrop than as a moving surface of memory, style and survival.
McGinley has often worked between documentary and staged image-making, but
Night Shift leans into the city’s unpredictable rhythms. Bodegas, sanitation trucks, staircases, graveyards and waterfront piers become part of the visual texture, along with the wear of old surfaces and the glow of urban light. The result is a sequence that moves between lyricism and grit without settling on either one.
Seen together, the photographs read as a nocturnal portrait of New York in motion, shaped by weather, architecture, desire and time.
Image:
Ryan McGinley, Bethesda Fountain, Central Park, 2026 © Ryan McGinley