Khaite and The Judd Foundation Hosted New York’s Culturati For Dinner At The Last Cool Building In SoHo
On a Wednesday evening in April—winter’s chill still lingering in the night air—a cast-iron SoHo building, 101 Spring Street, was packed. It’s one of the few addresses in the neighborhood left without a brand name on front: next door is Retrofête, a trendy New York based fashion brand known for their sparkly party dresses. Around the corner is the Museum of Ice Cream. And a Sephora. And a Capital One Café—a coffee shop chain by, yes, the Fortune 500 bank. It’s also likely the only building left that still retains mostly the same interiors as it had in the 1970s, when SoHo was populated with artists rather than the essentially elevated shopping mall it is today. And it’s definitely the only one that, at this particular moment in time, was filled with famous names like Aubrey Plaza, Grace Gummer, and Solange Knowles. They were all gathered there to mark the legacy of one man: Donald Judd, arguably the most famous of those aforementioned SoHo artists who once lived and worked in the very building they …






