Sure, you could enlist a decorator to fill your home with high-end art and furniture. Or you could simply buy a penthouse filled with pieces from a recently closed exhibition.
From May to October, one of the penthouses atop Manhattan’s Sutton Tower served as the location for Néotù: The Visionary Years—35 Years Later. The show, curated by Galerie Gabriel and Mouvements Modernes, celebrated French designers such as Elizabeth Garouste, Mattia Bonetti, and André Dubreuil. Now, rather than dismantling the exhibit, the penthouse is being offered for sale with all of the works included.

An elevator leads directly to the great room, which is anchored by a statement fireplace.
Kenneth Chen/Evan Joseph Studios
What that means is the museum-like spread is decked out with unique furniture that livens up the otherwise understated aesthetic. One office is centered around Garouste and Bonetti’s cow-print Rodeo desk and armchair, while another sports Pucci de Rossi’s blocky metal desk and chairs. Elsewhere, an art-filled den gets a pop of color from Garouste and Bonetti’s red-velvet Corbeille sofa. In total, it’s a collection worth $4.3 million, with the turnkey unit priced at $24.3 million.
Designed by the architect Thomas Juul-Hansen, Sutton Tower rises 850 feet above Manhattan’s East Side. The 121 residences include a handful of penthouses, with a two-story version hitting the market a year ago for $65 million. The unit currently on offer may not be as large as that one, but it still sprawls across 4,765 square feet and includes four bedrooms and 4.5 bathrooms.

The cow-print desk and chair in one of the offices were part of the gallery show.
Kenneth Chen/Evan Joseph Studios
A direct elevator spits you out into the penthouse’s great room, which sports 15-foot ceilings, a striking fireplace, and floor-to-ceiling windows that offer spectacular views of the city. The white marble kitchen is paired with Italian matte lacquer cabinetry and outfitted with Wolf and Sub-Zero appliances. Solid oak-plank flooring takes you to the primary suite: Here, the corner bedroom gets a Bianco Dolomiti and Calacatta Gold marble en suite, with a deep soaking tub for relaxing baths.
While you practically live in an art gallery of your own, Sutton Tower also has a sculpture garden if you feel like admiring some pieces en plein air. The building amenities also include an indoor pool, spa treatment rooms, a fitness center, and a screening room, among others. Listed with Carl Gambino at Compass, Penthouse 72 has more than enough features to keep you occupied, though.
Click here to see all the images of the art-filled penthouse.
Authors
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Tori Latham
Tori Latham is a digital staff writer at Robb Report. She was previously a copy editor at The Atlantic, and has written for publications including The Cut and The Hollywood Reporter. When not…


