NGC 6822 is a barred irregular galaxy located about 1.6 million light years away in the Sagittarius constellation. We are observationally identifying red supergiants (RSGs) in this galaxy to compare with stellar evolutionary models. Stellar evolutionary theory provides us with the expected quantity of RSG populations. The research conducted will allow for a comparison between observational data to theoretical expectations. Here, we propose a new sample of RSG candidates in NGC 6822 that can be utilized as an observational test of such theory. RSG stars are the coolest of the evolved massive stars and have K and M spectral types and temperatures below 4100 K. Typically, they can be up to a thousand times the radius of the Sun and are therefore highly luminous. To find them in NGC 6822, we first used parallax and proper motion values from the GAIA satellite to filter out foreground stars, before using the NIR color-magnitude diagram to eliminate lower-mass asymptotic giant branch star contaminants. Next we transformed the J and K magnitudes to effective temperatures and luminosities to create an HR diagram (HRD), and selected RSGs based on their position on the HRD. Currently, we are comparing our results to previous spectroscopically confirmed RSGs. In combination with population studies done by ourselves and others in the Local Group galaxies IC 10, M31, M33, and the Magellanic Clouds, we can test model predictions across a wide range of metallicities. Additionally, by locating a population of RSGs in NGC 6822, future possibilities for studying these massive stars with direct spectroscopic follow-up are created.