Robert Servat Studios

Current Collection

The Current Collection:
June & July 2025

Each painting here is an original work, released during this cycle only. Once the collection closes, these pieces will no longer be available and may never be offered again.

These works are not shown in galleries.

Pricing is available upon request via the Art Inquiry Request page.

These are not mass-released collections. Each work is selected for release during the current cycle to be offered quietly and personally to collectors. 

If something calls to you, you’re welcome to inquire.

Offering #1

Title: “La Poma Koro”
Acrylic on canvas

Size: 24 x 30″

Artist Reflections:

“Based on a short poem I wrote.  Title is Esperanto for “The Apple Heart.”  Blends anatomy with self-reflection.”

Offering #2

This is a photograph of the painting "Tagger One" by Robert Servat.

Title: “Tagger One”
Mixed Media – Acrylic, spray paint, marker on canvas

Size: 18x 24″

Artist Reflections:

“The roughness of graffiti letters demanded faces for balance.  Cryptic letters wrote themselves.”

Offering #3

This is a photograph of the painting "Magnifying Monsters" by Robert Servat.

Title: “Magnifying Monsters”
Acrylic on paper

Size: 15 x 22.5″

Artist Reflections:

“People evaluate each other.  We look close to verify whether someone is human or a monster.  Not sure if they are magnifying one eye or if the other figure only has one eye.”

Offering #4

This is a photograph of the painting "We Expire" by Robert Servat.

Title: “We Expire”
Acrylic on canvas

Size: 18 x 24″

Artist Reflections:

“Title came from a voice I heard while waking from sleep that was repeating in an ominous tone.  The phrase is covered over twice.  Maybe I wanted to deny a fact of life.”

Offering #5

This is a photograph of the painting "Cheap Beef" by Robert Servat.

Title: “Cheap Beef”
Acrylic on canvas

Size: 16 x 20″

Artist Reflections:

“The umbrella-skull combo was central to this piece.  The title suggested itself as if something was put on sale only because it could not be trusted.”