Cause of death shooting accident Organization Demotte Galleries Name George Demotte | Occupation art dealer Children Lucien (died 1934) Died 1923, France | |
Born 1877 Belgium |
George joseph demotte top 5 facts
George Joseph Demotte, alternatively Georges-Joseph Demotte (1877-1923) was a Belgian-born art dealer, the owner of galleries in Paris (27 rue de Berri) and New York (8 East 57th Street) specializing in the sale of medieval French art.
His portrait was painted by Henri Matisse in 1918.
Obtaining an illuminated copy of the Persian Shahnameh ("Book of Kings"), he broke it up into sheets to maximize profits by selling the illustrations individually.
In 1923 he sued his former New York agent, Jean Vigoroux, in the French courts for embezzlement, while simultaneously suing Sir Joseph Duveen for slander in the American courts, for having declared a medieval statuette that Demotte had sold a fake. Neither suit had been settled when Demotte died, accidentally shot by a friend and fellow art-dealer, Otto Wegener, while returning from a boar-hunting trip. Wegener was cleared of homicide by the French courts, but ordered to pay compensation to Demotte's family.
His galleries, estimated at the time of his death to be worth $2,000,000, passed to his seventeen-year-old son Lucien Demotte (died 1934).