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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Art Collectors > Thaddaeus Ropac Takes on Martha Diamond Estate
Art Collectors

Thaddaeus Ropac Takes on Martha Diamond Estate

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 24 March 2026 11:32
Published 24 March 2026
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Thaddaeus Ropac has taken on the estate of Martha Diamond, the New York painter whose cityscapes are admired by artists yet largely under-recognized on the market. The gallery will represent the estate in collaboration with David Kordansky, with a first European museum survey set to open at the Sara Hildén Museum in Tampere, Finland, in September 2026.

Diamond, who died in 2023 at 79, spent more than six decades developing a body of work that translated the architecture of Manhattan into a distinct visual language. Her canvases, often built from repeated, vertical lines, hover between abstraction and figuration, capturing not the literal skyline so much as its essence.

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Ropac, the eponymous dealer, said his interest in the artist grew gradually, prompted first by the enthusiasm of artists he trusted. “I really learned always to listen to your artists when they point out an artist for you,” he said, recalling early conversations with Alex Katz, who spoke “very strongly, very highly” of Diamond’s work.

David Salle, who has followed Diamond’s work for decades, described encountering paintings that felt immediately, almost stubbornly resolved. “It was so clearly right… so declarative in its painterly identity,” he said, adding that their relatively limited audience over the years was “baffling,” given how “obviously good” they seemed. 

Wind, 1986. © the Martha Diamond Trust. Courtesy Thaddaeus Ropac gallery, London · Paris · Salzburg · Milan · Seoul. Photo: Grace Dodds

If Diamond is only now getting her due, she’s in crowded company. The art world has spent the past few years rediscovering artists it somehow managed to overlook in plain sight. Lois Dodd, for one, spent decades painting with near-total indifference to the market, only to see her prices spike in her 90s as collectors and institutions scrambled to catch up.

For Salle, the strength of the work lies in its commitment to painting as an act of decision-making under pressure. Diamond’s canvases were often executed in a single session, without revision, with “all the painter’s virtues are in play” at once: line, color, scale, and texture. The result is a body of work that feels both immediate and hard-won, balancing confidence with risk.

Diamond’s subject matter may also have contributed to her life on the margins. At a time when many painters turned toward figuration or conceptual strategies, she remained fixated on the urban skyline, and returned to it again and again. The comparison that recurs, one Ropac himself mentioned on the phone, is telling: just as Claude Monet and Frank Auerbach respectively returned over and over to Paris and Camden Town, Diamond painted Manhattan. Her buildings tilt, flatten, and repeat, becoming vehicles for rhythm and sensation rather than stable images.

Martha Diamond. Courtesy Thaddaeus Ropac.

The sensibility emerged early. After moving to a Bowery loft in 1969, Diamond began using the view from her window as a generative constraint, distilling the geometry of downtown Manhattan into a repertoire of “architectural and archetypal forms.” Over time, those forms migrated between cityscape and abstraction, with each mode feeding the other.

Diamond’s work was surveyed in the US in 2024 at the Colby College Museum of Art and the Alrdich Contemporary Art Museum; she gained representation with David Kordansky the year prior. Her jump to Ropac suggests that her influence is posthumously going international.

In addition to the forthcoming exhibition in Finland, Ropac will mount its first gallery presentation of Diamond’s work in Paris in 2027. If the current reassessment holds, Diamond could finally take her place not just as a painter admired by other painters, but as a central figure in the story of postwar American art.

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