Close Menu
    What's Hot

    Francis Bacon Painting Sells for $17.6 M at Sotheby’s London, Leading $63.3 M. Sale

    October 22, 2025

    London Zoo Removes Banksy’s Gorilla Artwork for ‘Safekeeping’ and Thanks Him for ‘Putting Wildlife in the Spotlight’

    October 22, 2025

    Andy Warhol’s Record-Breaking Auction Triumph

    October 22, 2025

    Architect Behind the Broad, MoMA Dies at 89

    July 2, 2025

    Mexican Artist Duo ASMA Follow Their Materials into the Unconscious 

    July 2, 2025
    Featuremyart
    • Home
    • Architecture
    • Art
    • Artist
    • Culture
    • Events
    Featuremyart
    You are at:Home»Art»“Eat Dinner, Take Meetings and Die.”
    Art

    “Eat Dinner, Take Meetings and Die.”

    aryanahmad313@gmail.comBy aryanahmad313@gmail.comNo Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    New York is a pretty sick town. Not in the “bro, that’s sick” way. Morbid, ill, macabre. The sickness has a lot to do with how disastrously emphasized the “New” in “New York” is with each passing generation. Forget what came before you. Just accept that things change. Enjoy the present while it lasts.

    While eating at the new New York restaurant Manuela in SoHo, I had only one thought: Our present sucks. To be blunt: Manuela is quite nice. The food is obviously excellent; even better are the people who work there. It’s the streets around it that are decadent and depraved, and blandly so. Manuela, a spinoff of an LA restaurant by Hauser & Wirth’s hospitality arm Artfarm, can’t help but be caught in the crossfire.

    Related Articles

    Manuela is located at 130 Prince Street. Across the street, at 127 Prince Street, was Gordon Matta-Clark’s FOOD, the artist-run restaurant opened in 1971, designed to provide struggling artists with a dining-room and a kitchen to prepare low-cost meals and to develop a warm community. Struggling artists. Low-cost. Community. Now, in 2025, across the street, artsy types can get a good half-chicken for $42, a good steak tartare for $26, good cream biscuits with country ham for $16, and bone-in ribeye for two with green peppercorn sauce, $175. Cool. Everyone here looks well fed and taken care of. And 127 Prince is no longer operated by Matta-Clark, but by Marc Jacobs.

    Manuela’s interior.

    Photo Dave Watts

    When I dined at Manuela with “the girls”—K.C., V.G., and J.S.—it was a chilly Galentine’s Day. At first, we went to the wrong door, one sealed-off, locked, and labeled “V.I.P.” Through the glass, we could see a private dining table seven meters long, studded with mosaic pieces by Rashid Johnson. Before we sipped our amaretto upon it, we were told the table was a tribute to the Central Park Five.

    This elite space is cordoned off from the rest of the restaurant, which is elsewhere strewn with tables painted in bright primary-school colors, and looked down upon by artworks of various sorts: a Phillip Guston painting of his wife Musa here, a Cindy Sherman photograph of a panicked girl there. A Louise Bourgeois spider guides you down to the toilets.

    Manuela’s website sells its cuisine, culture, and community as being “complemented by the guiding conviction that art and life are indivisible.” Sure! Yet that indivisibility feels more like a sick parody with each new day, especially in SoHo. Bordering Manuela is a new McNally Jackson location; the bookstore just moved over to live among the hubbub of boutiques. There, before my dinner, I bought a collection of Gary Indiana’s Village Voice columns, Vile Days. His words guide me through these early days of 2025. In 1988, he wrote: “I have avoided New York nightlife for years. Everything always looks to me like a stale parody of something else. Sexual opportunity is dead. So is romance. All anyone does any more is eat dinner, take meetings and die.” Some things don’t change.

    The food was good. The hospitality, beyond lovely. The atmosphere, equally conducive to a business meeting with an artist as a gossip session with the girls. At our tables, we talk of everyone’s love lives, thriving or failing, as I ogle a Rita Ackermann mural opposite me, with three “bored nymphettes” (Artnet’s wording) sprawled across a sofa scribbled with the question WHAT DID YOU DO TODAY? That day, all K.C. did was make plans with me to reread Dostoyevsky’s short story “White Nights” (1848), watch the Bresson film based upon it (Four Nights of a Dreamer, 1971), and wonder out loud how much of the food was made in the open kitchen opposite her versus how much had been prepared in the wings.

    Mille Feuille at Manuela.Photo Kristin Tieg

    K.C. recognized a good friend’s cousin, Molly, as our waitress. Molly is the kindest. She should be tipped generously, always, by all of you. We had a fabulous old time. And yet, crowded by insured masterworks, the experience is subtly creepy, as with other works of art turned into fun “experiences”—Luna Luna, immersive Van Gogh, Infinity Rooms.

    We go our separate ways for the night. I make plans the next day to see if “White Nights” is at the used bookstore I frequent. Later, when I find out it is not, I return to the McNally Jackson SoHo, next to Manuela on Prince.

    But before then, the final verdicts on our dinner. Ladies?

    K.C.: “Amazing!”

    V.G.: “So good! One of my favorite nights ever.”

    J.S.: “Ten out of ten. Would go back, if I could afford it.”


    Source link

    aryanahmad313@gmail.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Architect Behind the Broad, MoMA Dies at 89

    By aryanahmad313@gmail.comJuly 2, 2025

    Mexican Artist Duo ASMA Follow Their Materials into the Unconscious 

    By aryanahmad313@gmail.comJuly 2, 2025

    Chinese Architect Liu Jiakun Awarded Pritzker Prize

    By aryanahmad313@gmail.comJuly 2, 2025

    Rashid Johnson Models Gabriela Hearst’s Latest Fashion Line

    By aryanahmad313@gmail.comJuly 2, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Don't Miss

    Francis Bacon Painting Sells for $17.6 M at Sotheby’s London, Leading $63.3 M. Sale

    Spotlights By aryanahmad313@gmail.com

    It took nearly 20 minutes and more than 20 bids between several specialists on the…

    London Zoo Removes Banksy’s Gorilla Artwork for ‘Safekeeping’ and Thanks Him for ‘Putting Wildlife in the Spotlight’

    October 22, 2025

    Andy Warhol’s Record-Breaking Auction Triumph

    October 22, 2025

    Architect Behind the Broad, MoMA Dies at 89

    July 2, 2025
    Our Picks

    Francis Bacon Painting Sells for $17.6 M at Sotheby’s London, Leading $63.3 M. Sale

    By aryanahmad313@gmail.comOctober 22, 2025

    London Zoo Removes Banksy’s Gorilla Artwork for ‘Safekeeping’ and Thanks Him for ‘Putting Wildlife in the Spotlight’

    By aryanahmad313@gmail.comOctober 22, 2025

    Andy Warhol’s Record-Breaking Auction Triumph

    By aryanahmad313@gmail.comOctober 22, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Our Picks

    Now Is the Time to Think About Your Small-Business Success

    Architecture By aryanahmad313@gmail.com

    Mobile Marketing is Said to Be the Future of E-Commerce

    Architecture By aryanahmad313@gmail.com

    Social Media Marketing for Franchises is Meant for Women

    Architecture By aryanahmad313@gmail.com
    More

    Francis Bacon Painting Sells for $17.6 M at Sotheby’s London, Leading $63.3 M. Sale

    Spotlights By aryanahmad313@gmail.com

    London Zoo Removes Banksy’s Gorilla Artwork for ‘Safekeeping’ and Thanks Him for ‘Putting Wildlife in the Spotlight’

    Spotlights By aryanahmad313@gmail.com

    Andy Warhol’s Record-Breaking Auction Triumph

    Spotlights By aryanahmad313@gmail.com
    Reviews

    Dell Will Invest $125 Billion in China’s Tech in the Next 5 Years

    Reviews By aryanahmad313@gmail.com

    Boxtrade Lands $50 Million in Another New Funding Round with IBM

    Reviews By aryanahmad313@gmail.com

    A Look at How Social Media & Mobile Gaming Can Increase Sales

    Reviews By aryanahmad313@gmail.com
    • Home
    • Exhibitions
    • Reviews
    Copyright © 2026 Feature My Art. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.