In conversation with the gallery owner – Richard Demato

In conversation with the gallery owner – Richard Demato

4def9b_e5bcedb8b9f24654bf6ca3a8dc71ee1f I first met Richard Demato about five years ago. I was walking down the high street in Sag Harbor in New Yorks’ Long Island, and noticed a painting of a woman surrounded by birds in a gallery window. I went in to take a closer look, and there was this guy sitting behind a desk, casually dressed in that way that people who live by the coast dress, and we started talking about the artist and her work. As it turns out it was one of Andrea Kowch’s early exhibitions. I could kick myself for listening to my husband (he wasn’t sure where the piece I wanted would fit in our home) and not getting one of her paintings back then. Even at that time her work was being snapped up by major art museums, and in a very short space of time went up exponentially in value, and is now being secured by collectors before the paint is even dry. Andrea is an enormously talented and extremely successful artist, and when you talk to her she is very direct about the role that Richard and the RJD Gallery have had in that success in terms of their representation and marketing of her work. Which is an important and often overlooked aspect of the function a good gallery can have in an artist’s career.

Richard’s a New Yorker, and he’s got the accent and the attitude, and a razor sharp intellect. He has a shock of curly hair and a ground shaking laugh. He’s also got that somewhat tough business-like exterior. But when he starts talking about the art and the artists he represents, he softens. Over the years we’ve become friends, and I’ve come to appreciate he not only sells art, but he believes in the people he represents, and he cares for them and their craft a great deal. There’s a unique generosity in how he seeks to understand the artists and what it means and takes for them to create…

Read the full article on Lucille Smithson Art

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Artist
Style
Medium
Price
Size

Smolder

30" x 30" / 76.2 x 76.2cm
Acrylic

The Water’s Edge

24" x 20" / 61 x 50.8cm
Acrylic

The Shadow That Comes Inside

24" x 18" / 61 x 45.7cm
Acrylic

The House on Eden Road

24" x 30" / 61 x 76.2cm
Acrylic

The Fear of Man

12" x 16" / 30.5 x 40.6cm
Acrylic and ink

Stargazer

12" x 12" / 30.5 x 30.5cm
Acrylic and ink

Feast of the Unicorn

24" x 18" / 61 x 45.7cm
Acrylic and ink

Drive-in

8" x 10" / 20.3 x 25.4cm
Acrylic

Endless September

20" x 16" / 50.8 x 40.6cm
Oil on canvas

Point of Departure

19.68" x 19.68" / 50 x 50cm
Oil on canvas

Inquisitors

30" x 24" / 76.2 x 61cm
Oil on canvas

Gordale Gill

24" x 30" / 61 x 76.2cm
Oil on canvas

Ode to Georgia

28" x 20" / 71.1 x 50.8cm
Mixed media on panel

Tranquility

9" x 9" / 22.9 x 22.9cm
Mixed media on panel

Ernesty

9" x 9" / 22.9 x 22.9cm
Mixed media onpnael

Contemplation

9" x 9" / 22.9 x 22.9cm
Mixed media on panel

Benevolence

9" x 9" / 22.9 x 22.9cm
Mixed media on panel

Attendee

24" x 18" / 61 x 45.7cm
Oil on canvas

Pass with Care

18" x 14" / 45.7 x 35.6cm
Oil on canvas

Admit One

24" x 30" / 61 x 76.2cm
Oil on canvas

Internal Warfare

20" x 16" / 50.8 x 40.6cm
Mixed media on canvas

Invasive Species

30" x 24" / 76.2 x 61cm
Mixed media on canvas

Let Your Hare Down

20" x 16" / 50.8 x 40.6cm
Mixed media on canvas

Unexpected Company

36" x 60" / 91.4 x 152.4cm
Acrylic on canvas

Football

36" x 26" / 91.4 x 66cm
Charcoal on Stonehenge paper

Distracted

12" x 18" / 30.5 x 45.7cm
Oil on panel

Happy New Year

30" x 40" / 76.2 x 101.6cm
Oil on canvas

Summer of ’41

24" x 30" / 61 x 76.2cm
Oil on canvas

Prey

24" x 30" / 61 x 76.2cm
Oil on canvas mounted on wood panel

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