Altered States: Conversations on Consciousness & Creativity

George Nelson Preston’s new body of paintings were all created in the past two years. Ayahuasca is a part of Preston’s practice, entwined with his deep exploration of his own family and ancestral heritage connecting to native peoples of the United States, Africa and Brazil. Preston has deep ties to Brazil, and it has been an important place in his life and imagination since he first traveled there in the 1980s. The subtitle “Journeys and Returns” mirrors the trajectory of an ayahuasca experience. Preston explains, “When you ‘travel’ by ayahuasca you metaphorically climb a mountain, ‘repair’ at the summit and come back down to earth accompanied by native guardians, spoken words and music. As you journey, if you do not resist or fear you will go through many states of mind that take away fear, hate, and all the anti-humanist instincts.”

George Nelson Preston (b. 1938, New York, NY) is an artist whose mixed-media, abstracted paintings are anchored by his profound scholarship in African art, years in Lower Manhattan’s avant-garde art scene, and extensive travels across the Atlantic world as an art historian, essayist, and curator.

Preston’s art practice is built upon a foundation of artistic and intellectual mentors and spaces, starting with his parents and his birthplace of Harlem, NY. Having grown up next door to the modernist history painter Charles Alston and meeting social realist painter Robert Gwathmey and expressionist sculptor Chaim Gross in high school, Preston’s early work probed racial themes. In the 1950s, Preston moved to the Lower East Side where he co-founded the Artist’s Studio at his storefront loft on 48 E 3rd Street and was a charter member of the Phoenix Gallery. The Artist’s Studio became a nucleus for New York’s Beat subculture and groundbreaking poets such as Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and LeRoi Jones. The liberal brushwork and overlapping forms of Preston’s work from this time evoke free verse, layered Beat poetry, reflecting Preston’s immersion in the Downtown Manhattan art scene of the midcentury.

In the 1960s, Preston’s work became influenced by his extensive travels on either side of the Atlantic Ocean. His travels in the Caribbean introduced him to cultural paragons such as Celia Cruz, Alicia Alonso, and Pablo Neruda. In the late 1960s, he conducted art historical and archaeological fieldwork across the Eastern Mediterranean and West Africa. Starting in 1987, Preston began collaborating with Brazilian institutions such as Museu de Arte de São Paulo and Museu Nacional de Belas Artes on curation, programming, and writing. His involvement in the Brazilian art scene led him to collaborate with Dr. Emanoel Araújo in the planning of the I Encontro Afro Atlântico at the Museu Afro Brasil in São Paulo in 2012, a seminal institution for the preservation and dissemination of Afro-Atlantic art and culture. In 2016, he was elected the Pierre Verger Chair of Rio de Janeiro Academia Brasileira de Belas Artes.

Preston’s recent output has focused on capturing the common spirit of the cultures he has encountered in his circumnavigation of the Atlantic. The artist sees the ocean as an “aqueous continent,” with its shores along the Caribbean, Brazil, Africa, and Europe serving as its borders. Building on the sweeping, expressionistic linework and daring paint drips of his earlier work, Preston delves into his own family history as well as themes of memory, historical trauma, and the complex legacy of the African diaspora. His simultaneous use of paper cut-outs spliced and pasted quotations of European portraits, and African mask imagery reflects his extensive scholarship and travels.

Preston received a liberal arts BA in 1962 from the City College of New York, before earning an MA and PhD in art history from Columbia University in 1968 and 1973. Preston designed and curated the African Hall of the Brooklyn Museum in 1973, an exhibition which remained on view for ten years. In 2006, Preston co-founded the bi-local Museum of Art and Origins / Museu de Arte e Origins in Upper Manhattan and Santa Teresa, Rio de Janeiro with Dr. Dinah Guimaraens which makes public the artist’s own expansive, private collection of classical African art, East Asian works on paper, Amerindian First Nation art, eighteenth and nineteenth century European prints, and modern and contemporary art.

Preston’s work has been featured in solo and group exhibitions at David Zwirner Gallery, London (2023); Pinacoteca de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil (2022); Nina Johnson Gallery, FL (2022); Karl and Helen Burger Gallery at Kean University, NJ (2019); Grey Art Museum at New York University, NY (2017); Wilmer Jennings Gallery at Kenkeleba House, NY (2016); Merton D. Simpson Gallery, NY (2015); LeRoy Neiman Gallery, NY (2012); and gallery onetwentyeight, NY (2002), among others.

His work is held in museum collections including Museu Afro Brasil, São Paulo, Brazil; Musée Khelcom, Saly, Senegal; and Nigerian National Museum, Lagos, Nigeria, among others.

About Altered States

Altered States: Conversations on Consciousness and Creativity, a series of conversations with artists, writers, healers, teachers, seekers, and scientists, is the first offering from Altered States, a program created by Ira Silverberg. Altered States is a forum on creativity and consciousness designed to look at various notions and modalities employed in finding the space for a more expansive consciousness.

Altered States will also exhibit visual work; assemble convenings; present events with partners around the country; broadcast on The Eros Platform; podcast in time ; and publish the content we create in the Altered States Journal, chapbooks, broadsides, and books. In 2025 we anticipate presenting in East Harlem, the East End of Long Island, Brooklyn, and Bellport, NY, as well as in Philo, in Northern California.

Altered States was created by Ira Silverberg. He is an editorial and strategic advisor to publishers, arts nonprofits, writers, and artists. He teaches at Columbia University’s MFA Writing Program; is a Reiki Master; a Theta Healer; and has written for the Paris Review, Document Journal, and New York Magazine.

The debut of Altered States featured Lia Chavez, an artist and healer. Future speakers include Dimitri Mugianis a writer, musician, and healer; Randy Polumbo, whose creates visionary, immersive work; and Peter Hale, photography curator of the Allen Ginsberg Estate who will discuss the poet’s work at the debut of Altered States Exhibits, a show of Allen Ginsberg’s photography.

Reference Links

https://ryanleegallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Preston-PR-2024.pdf

George Nelson Preston

www.georgenelsonpreston.online