Art is an endless source of pleasure                                           - Peg Alston

Art is an endless source of pleasure

                                          - Peg Alston

In the nearly four decades since establishing Peg Alston Fine Arts, Peg Alston has emerged as this country’s foremost private dealer specializing in works by African American artists and other artists of African descent, as well as select pieces of traditional African sculpture. In addition to handling art created by gifted emerging and mid-career artists, Peg Alston has sold works by some of the most outstanding 20th Century Black masters, including Aaron Douglas, William H. Johnson, Laura Wheeler Waring, Horace Pippen, Charles White, and Elizabeth Catlett. She has also sold works by some of the leading names on the contemporary scene, among them: Sam Gilliam, Richard Yarde, Betye Saar, Howardena Pindell, Frank Bowling, William T. Williams, Ronald Burns, Edward Clark, David Driskell, Al Loving, Lubaina Himid, Oliver Johnson, Fred Hayes, Faith Ringgold, and Raymond Saunders, McArthur Binion and Stanley Whitney.

Peg Alston emerged on the New York art scene in 1972, a time when interest in art by African Americans was limited. Early giants such as Romare Bearden and Norman Lewis generously served as informal mentors during the beginning stages of her career. Thanks to her keen eye and tastes, commitment to her specialty, and dedication to educating the public through lectures and activism, she has played a pivotal role in cultivating an interest around the country for investing in African American fine art. Long active with the Studio Museum in Harlem and many other major New York City cultural institutions, Peg Alston organized some of the first seminars on collecting, appraising and cataloguing African American art. She was also appointed to the Arts Committee on the New York State Council of the Arts and served the maximum term of 3 years.

Currently, Peg Alston is a member of Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA), the Association of Women Art Dealers (AWAD) and ArtTable. She was selected by History Makers for their `archival collection of outstanding African Americans.