Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1331915

Metalsmith James DeMartis Practices Iron Age Vocation In Springs

icon 10 Photos

author on Apr 10, 2018

When I enter James DeMartis’s studio on Springs-Fireplace Road, I am met by his very passionate assistant Kyle Fletcher. The self-described “Jack of all trades” helps with blacksmithing, fabricating and machining. “Pretty much the three processes that we do here,” he said.

While his boss was on the phone in a back office, Mr. Fletcher began my tour of the cavernous space. The metalsmith business, which started out with a one-bay garage, has now grown into three bays.

His team recently expanded the workshop in stages over six weeks, by adding doorways and lighting. In addition, welding, forging, sanding and finishing areas were created for a better organized, more efficient space.

I might as well have been on the moon. I could not help but notice hundreds of hand tools hanging on the walls. “These are James’s accouterments,” Mr. Fletcher said. “He’s collected them over years at barn sales and yard sales. Eighty percent are antiques, tools of a bygone age.”

Most everything in the space is a tool. “A tool is a means to an end,” Mr. Fletcher said. “Each tool has a purpose.” Some things, like a hammer, can accomplish many different tasks. “The persuader,” or “the driving force,” is used in conjunction with another tool.

Others are specialty tools that do just one job, such as the wooden swage, a butcher block type table with two oval indentations, which Mr. DeMartis used earlier in the day to form copper shades for lighting designer Lindsey Adelman.

“Working with my hands, that tactile experience, gives me a certain satisfaction,” Mr. Fletcher said. “I’m kind of a rare breed. Most young people are pushed toward academics, not metal shops.”

Mr. DeMartis and his team do everything from custom art and architectural work to repairs and modifications of all things metal. “I can spend a lifetime on this and not learn everything,” Mr. Fletcher said.

Mr. DeMartis arrived and put Mr. Fletcher to work lengthening an art deco fire screen. Seated at a large table, he uses a pedal of the TIG welding machine, which enables him to control the heat better than a MIG welder. Handy when working with an electrical current that gets hotter than the surface of the sun.

While welders are the backbone of the shop, the hammer is the most used tool. Mr. DeMartis and Mr. Fletcher usually work on 20 jobs at once and the most common jobs are railings, indoor and outdoor. “We always have railings going on in the shop,” he said.

Jobs can get pretty odd too, like custom refrigerator doors made especially for condiments. “You think it can’t get any weirder and then it does,” Mr. DeMartis said.

Looking around the shop, there are two intricate globes created to commemorate a client’s anniversary, a pair of 19th century silver dragon boot scrapers from Europe, outdoor furniture decorated with scallop shells and seahorses, a 1940s cigar shop Indian that was once used as a display inside a Ralph Lauren shop and a bronze Don Cesar statue with a broken sword, also from the 1800s. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

“The more you look the more you see,” Mr. DeMartis said. “I’m always looking for well made beautiful tools.”

A crucible for melting bronze seems to hang in mid air. He doesn’t melt much bronze these days. “It’s such a beautiful object,” he said of the crucible. “I just love looking at it.”

Mr. DeMartis has at least a dozen anvils, the oldest of which dates back 250 years. “I like to collect different sizes, time periods and shapes,” he said. “They all serve the same purpose, which is to hammer hot metal, and can last forever if they’re not abused.”

Stock racks hold steel, stainless steel, aluminum, brass, bronze and copper of different lengths and shapes. “Back in the day, you’d have to fabricate your shapes, but today they come in every shape you can imagine,” he said.

Fascinated by a 5-foot-by-5-foot acorn table, Mr. DeMartis kindly demonstrates the reason behind the square holes on the flat surface by reaching for a clamping dog, a wooden block and smithing hammer. The bent metal holds the material in place while he works on it. Originally, the thick, heavy cast metal was used as flooring in shipyards. “I’m told it came from the Brooklyn Navy Yard,” he said. “It’s been brought up to nice working height with wheels.”

Mr. DeMartis was born in Brooklyn and grew up in Westchester County. He came to the East End in 1992, after answering an ad in the Village Voice to work for the eccentric artist Nova Mihai Popa at his Ark Project, an outdoor sculpture park in Water Mill. “I’m one of the few to survive to tell the tale,” he said of the once bustling community compound.

He then worked for John Battle, a metal worker in Bridgehampton, before moving to his own studio in East Hampton 17 years ago. He’s become a fixture in Springs, generously giving blacksmith demonstrations for the public in the Parson Forge, across from Ashawagh Hall.

The 1886 barn originally belonged to Charles Parson, who used the tools of the trade to fashion equipment for farmers and fishermen. “It’s the greatest aspect of historic Springs,” he said. “I’m delighted to use the space.”

He tries to coincide with the Springs Farmers Market in the summer. “It’s so much fun. I just open my doors to a built-in crowd.”

For the past several years, he’s been a part of Loring Bolger’s “Sculpture in Springs” project. But his biggest project was putting his daughter into first grade at the Springs School this year.

Hanging high on the walls of his studio are several fantasy landscape paintings by his namesake. “My dad was a fine art painter,” said Mr. DeMartis, who is mounting a retrospective of his father’s work at Ashawagh Hall from May 18 to 20. The pastel colors stick out from all the rusty shades of brown.

“I tried painting and drawing in college but it didn’t click until I got a welding torch and hammer in my hand,” he said. “The physicality really grabbed me.”

As his business evolves and develops, he has less time to devote to artwork but life is a compromise. “That’s the trade off,” he said. He enjoys donating to charity auctions such as Project Most and he has a shop on the website 1stDibs.

You can find his indoor sculpture “Pipe Dream” in the exhibition “East End Collected 4,” curated by Paton Miller, at the Southampton Arts Center until May 20. “It’s an incredible show,” Mr. DeMartis said. “I’m thrilled to be a part of it.”

You May Also Like:

‘World War II Radio Christmas Play’ To Run at Southampton Cultural Center

Boots on the Ground Theater at the Southampton Cultural Center will present Pat Kruis Tellinghusen’s “World War II Radio Christmas Play” from December 5 to 14. Performances are Fridays and Saturdays at 7 p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. The holiday production recreates the experience of attending a 1940s radio show broadcast on Christmas Eve during World War II. Featuring songs of the era, stories inspired by real veterans, live sound effects, and a full on-stage radio studio, the play transports audiences to another time. Old-fashioned radio sponsors, jingles, and classic Christmas carols round out the performance, offering a festive ... 12 Nov 2025 by Staff Writer

Guild Hall's 2025 Student Art Festival, 'Rauschenberg 100,' Celebrates Local Artists, Students, and the Legacy of a Legendary Painter

Guild Hall’s Student Art Festival, an annual tradition since 1938, returns on November 15 with ... 11 Nov 2025 by Hope Hamilton

Round and About for November 13, 2025

Music & Nightlife Mysteries, Deceptions and Illusions Allan Zola Kronzek, a sleight-of-hand artist, will perform ... by Staff Writer

At the Galleries for November 13, 2025

Montauk The Lucore Art, 87 South Euclid Avenue in Montauk, is showing “Moment of Motion,” ... by Staff Writer

Get Ready To Laugh: Long Island Comedy Festival Hits The Suffolk on Thanksgiving Eve

The Long Island Comedy Festival returns to The Suffolk on Thanksgiving Eve to kick off the holiday season with a night of laughs on Wednesday, November 26, at 8 p.m. Now in its 19th season, the Long Island Comedy Festival brings together four of New York’s funniest comedians in one night, hosted by Long Island’s own Paul Anthony. The lineup includes Maria Walsh, known as “America’s Naughtiest Mommy” and a Las Vegas headliner; John Santo, a master impressionist performing at Mohegan Sun; Rob Falcone, a national headliner who has appeared on Showtime and HBO; and Chris Monty, a national headliner ... by Staff Writer

Guild Hall’s Student Art Festival, Rauschenberg 100, Launches This Weekend

Guild Hall’s Student Art Festival, an annual tradition since 1938, returns on November 15 with ... 10 Nov 2025 by Hope Hamilton

BCM Autumn Concerts Continue This Weekend

On Saturday, November 15, at 5 p.m., Bridgehampton Chamber Music will present the second of ... by Staff Writer

Sticks & Stones Comedy To Present All-Star Stand-Up Show Featuring D’yan Forest

Sticks & Stones Comedy will present an “All-Star Stand-Up Comedy Show” featuring Michelle Schwartzman, Rob White, Joe Winchell and the Sticks & Stones All-Star Comedy Lineup on Saturday, November 15, at 8 p.m. at the Southampton Cultural Center. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. Fresh from her sold-out show at Joe’s Pub, special guest and Southampton resident D’yan Forest will join the lineup. Forest holds the Guinness World Records title for the oldest working female comedian in the world at age 89. Often called “the naughty Betty White,” she has appeared on “The Drew Barrymore Show,” Time Out New York, The ... by Staff Writer

Sag Harbor’s Julie Keyes To Jury Newport Art Museum’s Members’ Exhibition

Julie Keyes, a Sag Harbor-based art consultant with more than 30 years of experience in the contemporary art world, will serve as juror for the Newport Art Museum’s “Springboard: Members’ Juried Exhibition,” opening Thursday, January 22, 2026. Keyes is founder and principal of Keyes Art, a global art consultancy, and has worked with private collectors, corporations and cultural institutions to acquire and present significant works of art. She brings a unique perspective as both an advocate for emerging talent and a trusted advisor to established collectors. “‘Springboard’ invites artists to put their best foot forward,” Keyes said. “In conversation with ... by Staff Writer

‘Sea Through River’ Opens at LTV Studios

LTV Studios will present “Sea Through River,” an exhibition curated by Haim Mizrahi, on display now through November 30. The exhibition features works by Anahi DeCanio, Josh Dayton, Michael McDowell, Steve Romm, Lenore Bailey, Haim Mizrahi and Zach Minskoff. An opening reception will be held Saturday, November 15, from 4 to 7 p.m. The public is invited to view the exhibition and meet the artists. LTV Studios is located at 75 Industrial Road in Wainscott. For details, visit ltveh.org. by Staff Writer