George Grippinos is a photographer renowned for documenting the extravagant, high-stakes culture of 1980s and 1990s Wall Street, specifically focusing on financiers and their luxury supercars. His work often captured the, at the time, unique trend of lifting Ferraris, Lamborghinis, and Porsches into high-rise penthouses and offices. Between 1992 and 1999, Grippinos shot a series featuring luxury vehicles installed as centerpieces in boardrooms and living spaces, reflecting extreme wealth.
During the 1990s Wall Street boom, supercars were treated as “domestic sculptures.” Having a supercar was not only about enjoying speed. It was about sending a message. By placing the car indoors they made sure it was always seen. Clients and visitors would walk in and immediately understand the level of wealth and power in the room. To get the vehicles into these unconventional spaces, owners often had them lifted by crane into high-rise offices, penthouses, and Upper East Side homes.
Grippinos’ work frequently showcased iconic 1990s models such as the Ferrari F40 and various Lamborghinis and Porsches. He captured this with a calm and honest eye. He did not judge or exaggerate. He simply showed how objects can define people and how success can be displayed in very personal ways.
These images capture something that feels almost surreal today, the sheer audacity of having a supercar as office décor, a symbol of how excess defined that particular moment in American finance culture. It’s a time capsule of a very specific kind of wealth flexing, long before social media made such displays routine.


























