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While obtaining his master's degree, Alston was the boys ’ work director at the Utopia Children's House, started by James Lesesne Wells.
He also began teaching at the Harlem Arts Workshop, founded by Augusta Savage in the basement of what is now the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.
Alston's teaching style was influenced by the work of John Dewey, Arthur Wesley Dow, and Thomas Munro.
During this period, Alston began to teach the 10-year old Jacob Lawrence, whom he strongly influenced.
Alston was introduced to African art by the poet Alain Locke.
In the late 1920s Alston joined Bearden and other black artists who refused to exhibit in William E. Harmon Foundation shows, which featured all-black artists in their traveling exhibits.
Alston and his friends thought the exhibits were curated for a white audience, a form of segregation which the men protested.
They did not want to be set aside but exhibited on the same level as art peers of every skin color.

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