Midnight’s Daydream: Artists-in-Residence, group exhibition, Studio Museum in Harlem, New York (2007)

Nathaniel Hawthorne once wrote that at midnight “the mind has a passive sensibility, but no active strength.” It is within this quiet, reflective state that some of our most extraordinary fantasies are released. The work of this year’s artists-in-residence—Titus Kaphar, Wardell Milan II, and Demetrius Oliver—imagines what might unfold if midnight itself were to daydream, surrendering its passivity and slipping into an active yet semi-conscious condition, suspended between waking reality and the delirium of sleep.

The Artists-in-Residence Program represents one of the founding initiatives of the Museum from its inception in 1968.

Image: Midnight’s Daydream: Titus Kaphar, Wardell Milan II, and Demetrius Oliver, Artists-in-Residence 2006-2007. Installation view. Photo: Adam Reich

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Midnight’s Daydream: Artists-in-Residence, 2007