The 2,300 square foot Westchester County abode that Pete Davidson has called home since 2023 marked its second month on the market recently with a price reduction from $2.4 million to $2.2 million. Tabloids have since confirmed that the actor, comedian, and occasional art world hob-nobber is ultimately selling his pastoral paradise so he can live near his family in Staten Island, now that he has a daughter with his girlfriend, model Elsie Hewitt. The listing’s photos, though, reveal the pop culture-driven art collection that has animated Davidson’s bygone bachelor pad these past few years.
Davidson customized this 1930s country home respectfully but rather extensively, adding a pool, a garage movie theater, and even a hidden speakeasy. Each successive room offers a new, vibrant shade of man cave—with the art to match.
A print of White Angel With Heart (1995) by famed German-American pop artist Peter Max—likely one of 300 made—watches over Davidson’s airy living room. Stand Up Devil by American illustrator Mickey Paraskevas, creator of the children’s television show Maggie and the Ferocious Beast, guards the couch. The painting appeared in Paraskevas’s exhibition at the Southampton Art Center in autumn 2019.
Pete Davidson Is Selling His ‘Paradise’ Home in Westchester to Be Closer to Family in Staten Island https://t.co/Oj362zIvz1 pic.twitter.com/fHhQHBK7HK
— Mansion Global (@MansionGlobal) April 2, 2026
An adjacent dining area features a mid-sized collectible edition of the “The World Is Yours” sculpture from Scarface. Nearby stands an edition of the Sunset Cactus sculpture that Italian radical design brand Gufram released alongside British fashion label Paul Smith in 2023. Their take riffs off the Cactus (1972) coat rack of Italian radical designers Guido Drocco and Franco Mello.
Davidson’s infamous 10,000-piece VHS collection—an investment strategy that has not yet panned out—appears to live mostly throughout his home’s basement. There, American caricaturist Al Hirschfeld’s 1991 print classic comedians: abbott/costello/laurel/hardy joins a sculpture of Brian from the animated series Family Guy and a flag naming Staten Island neighborhoods. The salmon-colored movie theater, meanwhile, hosts a slate of vintage arcade games and what seems to be Give Me Some More—an apparently Peter Tunney-inspired artwork by a “Post Pop Artiste” named JOSEPH. Galerie Art Jingle showed the piece at their Paris space in 2020.
The bedrooms each keep with this theme, too. One of the 199 prints of Red Hot (2013) that American painter Mel Ramos once released spices up one makeshift guest room off the home’s back deck. Another bedroom get another icon—this time, former Cosmopolitan cover artist Bradshaw Crandell’s Smoking Girl (c. 1940). Whether Davidson owns the original painting or a print remains unclear. Ginnel Real Estate, which is handling the sale, could not offer further details.
Scores and scores of little relics abound in between, from framed notes to stills from classics like Die Hard and Pinky and the Brain—a reminder that art collecting ought to be fun.
