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The food looks like it has been prepared for a culinary magazine. While in New York City add Red Bamboo as a culinary experience. It will be a good place to take a date to or get together with some friends. You will not be disappointed.
I absolutely love this place. The Wings are the best things ever!!! I've been a veggie for 22 years now and never had wings, Philly Cheese steak etc so to get all this as a veggie option is fantastic! I go to this place every time I'm in New York :)
Very nice, cozy place. Service was good, food delicious and so much to choose from :) Wanna go there again :)
Pros: Good price, Good food, Cozy place and nice staff

ECLECTIC VEGAN CUISINE
SOY DELICIOUS
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![In honor of Black History Month, we wanted to highlight the work of an important Black artist. Before 140 West 4th St was home to Red Bamboo it was home to openly gay modernist jewelry designer, Art Smith. He began his studio here after being run out of his previous Cornelia St location by racist and homophobic attackers. From the late 1940s to 1979, Smith created jewelry for dancers, actors, and musicians in this studio, including pieces for Duke Ellington and Lena Horne. His pieces have been shown in the Brooklyn Museum, the Jamaica Arts Center, and are currently on view at The Met, the Cooper Hewitt Museum, the Museum of Art and Design, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, as well as the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.
1. The designer in his studio with his “Diminishing Spirals” necklace, designed c. 1958. ART SMITH ARCHIVE, COLLECTION OF THE SMITHSONIAN NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY AND CULTURE
2. “JEWELRY.” Craft in America, PBS, 10 Dec. 2021.
3. A model activates a brass-and-copper “Modern” cuff bracelet, designed in 1948. BROOKLYN MUSEUM, SC03.2007.61.15 © ESTATE OF PETER BASCH
4. Art Smith, New Yorker advertisement for Art Smith Jewelry appearing on December 5, 1953, ca. 1950, Brooklyn Museum Library, Arthur Smith Papers, Special Collections
5. Cannon, John, Narrator. One tenth of a nation. The arts. prod by American Newsreel Corporation Uction Company [United States: distributor not identified, 1954] Video. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <www.loc.gov/item/2020600724/>.](https://scontent-iad3-1.cdninstagram.com/v/t51.75761-15/481022540_18486690304033929_575314760866488677_n.jpg?stp=dst-jpg_e35_tt6&_nc_cat=107&ccb=1-7&_nc_sid=18de74&efg=eyJlZmdfdGFnIjoiQ0FST1VTRUxfSVRFTS5iZXN0X2ltYWdlX3VybGdlbi5DMyJ9&_nc_ohc=ITEYtnDm8kgQ7kNvwHI9Cho&_nc_oc=AdmGhUFUd2uKpxT7ehXewr5RbBFV8nD9nAjMayNNAuvYWGaW3nQIr_7ge7xfcBAzJrA&_nc_zt=23&_nc_ht=scontent-iad3-1.cdninstagram.com&edm=ANo9K5cEAAAA&_nc_gid=yu9zG7W0WZus7nIR6iaQxQ&oh=00_AfdJ16HhGZnQRspYlZF6yLuukYf-SCu37WV-HnF-WfFGDg&oe=69008765)





























