Lévy Gorvy Dayan Recreates the Dazzle of 1980s New York

Downtown/Uptown: New York in the Eighties is a sweeping survey featuring a stellar roster of artists organized by Mary Boone

Art gallery exhibit featuring colorful paintings, intricate drawings, and a decorative vase on display in a minimalist setting.
Installation view, "Downtown/Uptown: New York in the Eighties." Photo: Elisabeth Bernstein. Courtesy of Lévy Gorvy Dayan

Lévy Gorvy Dayan is revisiting a decisive chapter in New York’s cultural history with Downtown/Uptown: New York in the Eighties, a sweeping survey staged across its landmark Beaux-Arts townhouse on East 64th Street. The show is organized in collaboration with Mary Boone—immortalized by New York Magazine in the early ‘80s as “queen of the New York art scene.” A stellar roster of artists has been brought together whose careers both defined and upended the art world at a time when the city’s galleries, nightclubs, and lofts doubled as stages for artistic invention, extravagance and confrontation.

Artwork of a standing person on a bold red background, featuring a collage-style arrangement of fragmented body images.
Andy Warhol Reel Basquiat (1984). Photo: © 2025 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Inc. Licensed by Artists Rights Society ARS New York. Courtesy Lonian Gallery II LLC
Hanging punching bag with graffiti-style artwork, including a crown and text saying "Mary Boone," on a white background.
Jean-Michel Basquiat Untitled (Mary Boone) (1984-85). Photo: © Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat. Licensed by Artestar, New York

Two Currents in One Decade

Gallery partner Brett Gorvy, who spearheaded this show, describes the 1980s New York arts scene as a “thriving hub of pioneering creativity, artistic collaboration, and celebrity,” in which radically different approaches not only coexisted but often clashed. On one side was the raw energy of neo-expressionist painting—brash, emotional, and larger-than-life. Keith Haring, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Julian Schnabel, Eric Fischl, Francesco Clemente, and Kenny Scharf epitomized the painter-as-provocateur, their canvases echoing the era’s exuberance and instability.

David Salle King Kong (1983). Photo: © 2025 David Salle _ VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Courtesy of Gladstone Gallery, NY. Courtesy The Brant Foundation, Greenwich, Connecticut
Textured abstract artwork with brown and orange patterns, featuring a seated figure with a blue face and pink body.
Julian Schnabel Aborigine Painting (1980). Photo: © Julian Schnabel Studio_ Photo by Argenis Apolinario_ Courtesy the artist and Vito Schnabel Gallery

In sharp contrast stood the practitioners of appropriation and conceptual critique, who interrogated mass media, consumerism, and gender politics. The Guerrilla Girls, Cindy Sherman, Barbara Kruger, Andy Warhol, Sherrie Levine, Jeff Koons, Louise Lawler, Richard Prince, Haim Steinbach, and Christopher Wool all feature here, their works reflecting the decade’s obsession with images and originality. Additional perspectives from artists such as Peter Halley, Sally Mann, Robert Mapplethorpe, Ross Bleckner, and Andres Serrano underscore the decade’s tumultuous intersections of desire, mortality, and spectacle.

A shiny metal sculpture of an animated character holding an object with various tools and items integrated into its design.
Jeff Koons Fisherman Golfer (1986). Photo: © Jeff Koons
Cindy Sherman Untitled #86 (1981). Photo: © Cindy Sherman Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Courtesy Fischl Gornik Family Foundation

A Decade of Excess and Impact

The exhibition acknowledges the forces that shaped and shadowed the art world of the period: the AIDS epidemic, the Reagan-era ethos of wealth and deregulation, and the rise of the “art star” as a new cultural archetype. Boone’s involvement grounds these themes in lived history; her galleries in SoHo and Uptown were arenas where many of these movements—and rivalries—played out in real time.

Modern art display with five sculpted figures and three boxes of corn flakes on a contrasting black and white shelf.
Haim Steinbach, generic black and white, #4 (1987). Photo: © Haim Steinbach. Courtesy of the artist
Black stencil text on white background reading "RUN DOG EAT DOG RUN" in bold, block letters.
Christopher Wool, Untitled (1990). Photo: © Christopher Wool

Immersive Museum-Style Staging

True to the spirit of the decade, the exhibition embraces performance and theatricality awhile retaining curatorial rigor—a museum-style presentation that mirrors the decade’s own over-the-top allure. Visitors can expect to encounter both iconic works and rediscoveries that resonate anew in today’s cultural climate. Do not miss taking the elevator, where you can practice your dance moves while listening to a custom disco soundtrack.

Abstract painting of a surprised face against a colorful, expressive background with a window and a column.
Francesco Clemente Name (1983). Photo: © Francesco Clemente
Minimalist abstract painting with a textured light green top and bold red bottom divided by thin black lines.
Peter Halley Yellow Cell with Conduit (1982). Photo: © Peter Halley. Courtesy of the artist

With works spanning multiple floors and moods, the exhibition offers not just a retrospective of iconic figures, but a reframing of New York in the 1980s—as a place where artistic ambition fed directly off the city’s volatility, excess, and intensity.

Art gallery interior with large photo of a woman's face on the left wall and "What me worry?" text artwork on the back wall.
Installation view, “Downtown/Uptown: New York in the Eighties.” Photo: Elisabeth Bernstein. Courtesy of Lévy Gorvy Dayan
Modern art gallery with large abstract paintings on white walls, one featuring a face and the other with vibrant red and green figures.
Installation view, “Downtown/Uptown: New York in the Eighties.” Photo: Elisabeth Bernstein. Courtesy of Lévy Gorvy Dayan
Installation view, “Downtown/Uptown: New York in the Eighties.” Photo: Elisabeth Bernstein. Courtesy of Lévy Gorvy Dayan
Contemporary art gallery with colorful sculptures and cowboy-themed paintings on white walls, bright and spacious interior.
Installation view, “Downtown/Uptown: New York in the Eighties.” Photo: Elisabeth Bernstein. Courtesy of Lévy Gorvy Dayan

Downtown/Uptown is on view through December 13