In New Gallery Show, Guerrilla Artist Displays Black Americans’ Struggles — and Success

In New Gallery Show, Guerrilla Artist Displays Black Americans’ Struggles — and Success

Ronald L. Jones and his mixed-media piece 'Black [Life Defined By A Construct]'

Black [Between The Lines] is a new, provocatively titled exhibition by Houston artist Ronald Llewellyn Jones, on view through March 5 at Hooks-Epstein Galleries. This is Jones’ first solo gallery show, and the first Hooks-Epstein show in the New Year since its director Geri Hooks passed in June.


Jones is a self-taught multidisciplinary artist, known for his site-specific sculptures — works he installs “guerrilla” style in outdoor locations, as well as in traditional galleries and museums. Using of long strands of string secured to the ceiling, walls and floors of the gallery, Jones challenges the viewer to navigate areas of inaccessibility, and consider how societal constructs can quite literally impede freedom of movement, and communication across class, ethnicity and gender.

These elaborate webs also represent a neural network of African American endeavors, reminding the viewer that the contributions of Black Americans, from slavery to the present day, must be acknowledged in any discussion of our country’s historical narrative. On yet another level, Jones’ complex use of string connects back to the history of avant-garde art in the West, one example being Duchamp’s “one mile of string” installed for the 1942 exhibition First Papers of Surrealism.

Inside Hooks-Epstein, Jones has created two webs, one stretched above a 20-inch box sculpture titled Black [Life Defined By A Construct]. Inside the “construct” of the box, suspended by thin, near invisible wires, are squares of transparent plexiglass and a self-portrait based on a drawing Jones made during a period in his life when he was homeless. Tellingly, there is no glass front; one can reach inside and presumably, the bespectacled Jones has found a “way out.” (The gold ink used in the drawing signifies one’s “inner gold” and its promise of transformation.)

Meanwhile, near the entrance of the gallery, a second web emerges out of a pedestal or wishing well containing more plexiglass and gold threads, supporting several tiny sculptures of individual plots of land, each with its own miniature caretaker. Titled The Souls of Black Folk after the book by W.E.B. Du Bois, the work is a rough-hewn, yet elegant representation of humankind’s interconnectedness, and our potential as a global tribe to reject the constructs designed to keep us fearful and apart.

Art + Entertainment
Timeless Appeal at The Village: Sophisticated Retirement Living

THE STANDARD BEARER FOR LUXURY

We built The Village communities to exemplify sophisticated retirement living in Houston, surrounded by the heritage neighborhood of River Oaks, Tanglewood and Southampton. Each offers impeccable designer finishes and Aspenwood service detail with dining and resortstyle amenities making them premier locations for discerning Houstonians and their families. Impressive, spacious residential floor plans, generous natural light, and expansive terraces allow a new level of indoor-outdoor living. Beautiful spaces are designed for entertaining, fitness, and relaxation with a dedicated team to provide a secure lock and leave lifestyle for our members.

Keep Reading Show less

Ally Shell and Martijn van Koolwijk

BLAME IT ON the Moon! Mercury Chamber Orchestra’s 2025 gala at the Thompson hotel — themed “Moonlight Serenade and chaired by Ally Shell and Martijn Van Koolwijk — was a night of glamour and big band vibes, raising more than $350,000 for the company.

Keep Reading Show less
Art+Culture

Glenda and Russell Gordy and Alicia and Garrett Gordy (photo by Wilson Parish)

EVEN AS RODEO season winds down, the party people at the Stage Houston theater company were still donning boots and shouting yahoo — and taking in a record haul of $1.4 million!

Keep Reading Show less