Bishop Arts News
Dallas chef unveils dual cafe and tasting restaurant in Bishop Arts

Dish from chef Wyl Lima
A new concept combining food and art is coming to Dallas' Bishop Arts District: Called Ateliê and Origen, it'll be two interconnected dining concepts from chef Wyl Lima, housed at the same location at 365 W. Jefferson Blvd., offering distinct but complementary experiences.
Lima is founder of The Experience, a dining and arts series that has popped up in unexpected spaces, from penthouses to plant shops to The Charlotte American Bistro at 2822 N. Henderson Ave., where he serves as culinary director. Now, The Experience experience has a permanent home.
There's no firm opening date but the target is mid- to late September.
Ateliê is a globally inspired daytime café-bistro with espresso, pastries, and sandwiches in the morning, and a 12-item bistro menu featuring dishes like grilled whole mackerel, croque madame, flatbread with prawns, and half-roasted chicken with sweet plantains in the afternoon. Designed as a dynamic space that reflects what Chef Wyl craves on his days off, the menu is seasonal, ever-changing, and not tied to any one region or tradition.
Ateliê also serves as a satellite gallery to Daisha Board Gallery, where emerging artists’ work is displayed and available for purchase throughout the space.
Origen is a reservation-only limited-seating tasting room open Thursday-Saturday, serving a seven- to 10-course seasonal menu, shaped by Chef Wyl’s background in fine dining, including his time as Chef de Cuisine at Michelin-starred Temporis in Chicago, with each dish reflecting a specific piece selected with Daisha Board Gallery.
The family-owned project is rooted in community, collaboration, and honoring the immigrant journey. Wyl and his cousin, co-founder Vivaldo Gouveia, credit their mothers—who immigrated from Angola—for instilling the values that made this concept possible.
"I’ve been an artist my whole life," Lima says. "I’ve written, I’ve made music, and food just became the most interesting medium for me. In my early 20s I was curating shows, and after cooking in Chicago and coming back home, it’s always been a dream to bring those two parts of my world together. This space is meant to be a sensory experience. Everything you see, hear, and taste should feel creatively stimulating."
