Edwynn Houk Gallery presents Ron Norsworthy's fractured interiors of aspiration and identity
Ron Norsworthy, Good Life 1988, 2025. Mixed media collage in relief on wood panel.
NEW YORK, NY.—
Edwynn Houk Gallery is presenting Ron Norsworthy: American Dream, on view from November 14, 2025 through January 17, 2026. This marks Norsworthys second solo exhibition with the gallery.
American Dream envisions the domestic interiors of Black middle-class life in scenes that hover between the achieved and the dreamed. The series includes ten collaged reliefs, made from photographs layered up to four inches deep. In these works, the construction remains visible in raw plywood edges, reflecting both the labor of cultural ascendancy and the performance that makes it visible. Also on view are three Layer Maps, a new extension of Norsworthys process. Each work on paper translates the layered build of the reliefs into precise, color-blocked studies.
At first glance, Norsworthys interiors appear orderly and composed, but their stability quickly falters. Walls tilt, mirrors double, and staircases lead to unseen stories. The architecture seems self-aware, both material and metaphor, revealing the tension between aspiration and artifice. Figures drift through these fractured rooms, caught between motion and reflection, inhabiting what W. E. B. Du Bois described as double consciousness. Within Norsworthys worlds, fragments of art history, film, design, and personal memory coexist on equal ground: Diana Ross and Billy Dee Williams from Mahogany, Grant Woods Young Corn, Good Times Black Jesus, and lilies grown in his own garden all belong to the same visual lexicon. The resulting vision is at once intimate and collective, drawn from the shared imagery of American pictures.
Norsworthy approaches photography as both a material and cultural language, one that has long shaped how America imagines itself. Since its beginnings, the medium has not only mirrored the American Dream but helped to build it, creating images of prosperity, belonging, and self-invention that continue to define the nations image. His constructions uncover the scaffolding behind those ideals. His work foregrounds the photographs physical presence, exposing the structuresboth visible and invisiblethat sustain the dream. Through this merging of the visual and the social, American Dream reveals photography not as reflection but as structure, the vessel through which America pictures and forms itself.
Ron Norsworthy is an interdisciplinary artist whose broad practice engages the fields of art, architecture, filmmaking and design. Informing his work is a foundational belief that the rooms, spaces and environments we inhabit and interact with speak volumes not only about who we are now, but also about our dreams, aspirations and our struggles as well. Through the creation of collaged reliefs, decorative objects, textiles and installations, his work carries the viewer through a non-linear, layered story of his life, one shaped by his lived experience as a queer person of the global majority.
Norsworthy was born in South Bend, Indiana and currently lives and works in Connecticut and New Jersey, respectively. His work has been exhibited at the Studio Museum of Harlem, NY; The Old Stone House, Brooklyn, NY; Visual Arts Center of New Jersey, Summit, NJ; The Wassaic Project in Wassaic, NY; Five Points Gallery, Torrington, CT; Standard Space, Sharon, CT; Project for Empty Space, Newark, NJ; the International Quilt Museum, Lincoln, NE; the New York Historical Society, NYC; the Governors Island Art Fair, Governors Island, NY; the Armory Show, NY; Paris Photo; and it is also in the permanent collection of the Newark Museum of Art. In 2023, Norsworthy was awarded a MacDowell Fellowship in Visual Arts.