For the Detroit native, it is a bit of a homecoming. He got his MFA from Temple University's Tyler School of Art & Architecture in 1992 and his wife is actually from Philadelphia.
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Pryor's journey to the top of America's first school and museum of fine arts was-as he calls it-a windy one.
He went to college at the University of West Georgia on a basketball scholarship, majoring in business.
But his best friend's father was the artist Al Loving. And after a trip to New York City and a close-up view of the art world, he gave up his scholarship to pursue a career in the arts.
While he counts Loving as a mentor, Pryor says his mother was the biggest art influence in his life. After his father died when he was 12, his mother went back to school, got her degree in interior design and opened a gallery that she ran up until age 93. She's now 94.
Pryor started his career painting and exhibiting abstract works before pivoting to arts administration.
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His priorities for PAFA include putting the institution on the cultural radar and making it a must-see destination for residents and visitors to Philadelphia.
He's also passionate about arts education in the schools, and he hopes PAFA can play a role in shaping the narrative of what defines American art.
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