When Sylvester Stallone and Jennifer Flavin bought their Palm Beach home, it wasn’t just the private stretch of beach—the only one in town—that drew them in. It was the light. High ceilings and big windows gave them space to breathe and, more importantly, room for art.
In an August profile for Veranda, Stallone recalled that he began collecting at 16, the same age he started painting himself. What started with a $15 canvas has grown into a collection that now includes George Condo, Rashid Johnson, Sterling Ruby, Damien Hirst, Bridget Riley, and Andy Warhol, who painted the actor’s portrait while he was filming Rocky III.
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The house functions as a gallery, though one that shifts constantly. A long hallway is kept blank except for whatever paintings Stallone rotates in and out. “I consider it like a wardrobe,” he said. “You move things around, and suddenly they’re new again.”
The dining room is anchored by a custom electric-blue table and a Hirst mosaic, its mirrored walls reflecting a Condo abstract. In the screening room, three large works by LeRoy Neiman hang above the bar—a reminder of Stallone’s friendship with the artist, who appeared in the Rocky films in exchange for paintings. Even the entry makes a statement: a Fernando Botero sculpture flanked by works from Riley and Joyce Pensato.
Designer Martyn Lawrence Bullard kept the furniture low-slung and durable so the art could do the talking. The pieces feel lived with, not preserved behind glass. The Stallones host dinners beneath Condo and Hirst, while dog toys end up under lacquered tables and near Johnson’s hall-spanning triptych.
For the couple, the collection isn’t extraordinary—it’s part of daily life. “Nothing we own is precious. Our family is precious,” Flavin said. That philosophy means Mondrian hangs near a gym wallpapered with tortoises, while Riley oversees the front door. The art is serious, but the atmosphere is anything but stiff.
This is a house where paintings spark conversation, sculptures greet you at the entry, and memories of Hollywood overlap with canvases by some of the most important artists of the last century. It’s a family home—but also one of Palm Beach’s most surprising private museums.