Henry Porter second career as a fine artist began in the late sixties after a successful first
career as a commercial artist in New York City that lasted twenty years.
A native of High Point, North Carolina, he attended Morgan State University on a football
scholarship and later studied Painting at the Academy of Arts in Newark, N.J. and Graphic
Design at the School of Visual Arts in New York City.
The artist moves with equal facility between figurative and abstract modes of expression. His
figurative work presents his vision of Black history, faith and Black achievement, while his
abstract creations give free reign to his imagination and his love of color and design.
Over the course of a distinguished career Porter has had a number of gallery, institution and
museum shows. They include the Brooklyn Museum, New York; Harriet Tubman Museum, Macon,
GA; Kennesaw State University, Kennesaw, GA; and the Georgia State Building. His work
can be found in public and private collections which include Mobil Oil, Sears Roebuck, H.J.
Reynolds, Bill Cosby, Melvin Van Peebles, the model Iman and the late Sammy Davis, Jr.