Customers browse at the Tampa Artist Emporium in South Tampa. Pictured below: Boggs stands behind the Emporium's front desk.
Two years ago, Tampa photographer Shelby Boggs took a gamble. Inspired by the Kress Emporium, an historic building in Asheville, NC, that serves as a marketplace for more than 80 regional artists and craftspeople, she set out to create something similar (if smaller) in Tampa. Using some money shed pocketed after flipping a house in the once-hot real estate market, she snagged a favorable lease in Hyde Park Village.
Boggs dubbed the location, once occupied by retailer Ann Taylor, the Tampa Artist Emporium and soon began renting wall and shelf space to local artists, who displayed their work. Monthly mixers and an open-door policy during the shopping districts popular outdoor art fair led to sales. In relatively short order, Boggs pie-in-the-sky idea didnt look so crazy after all.
But after about a year, the Emporiums lease in Hyde Park was up. So Boggs packed up andwith help from her husband and some of the Emporiums most devoted artistsmoved to South Tampas emerging design district, where furniture and home décor stores dot the streetscape.
Though the new location, steps from Starbucks on Bay to Bay Blvd, has proven advantageous, somewhere along the way Boggs lost steam. When stress sent her to the hospital, she realized something had to giveso she put out an under-the-radar call to the Emporiums artists (who number around 70), looking for someone to buy or help operate the business.
Sandra Jarrett, a painter and mixed media artist who has exhibited at the Emporium since day one, was quick to respond. The Tampa resident assumed ownership and asked Boggs to continue to run the Emporium as gallery director.
Shes the right person, and it needs to continue that way, Jarrett says.
On Saturday, the Emporium celebrates its second anniversary. The light-filled storepacked with art, jewelry, apparel, functional ceramics and the occasional piece of handmade furniturewill host a complimentary wine bar with food, gift basket giveaways, $25 portraits by Dave Pritchard and psychic readings rounding out eclectic offerings at the free event.
Looking back on her experience as an entrepreneur, Boggs voices astonishment at whats possible if you put your mind to it. In two years of business, she says, the Emporium has sold more than $200,000 in artwork.
Cheers to that.
Related: Mix and Mingle, Tampa Artist Emporium opens in Hyde Park, Creative Loafing, Aug. 2007.
Megan Voeller is Creative Loafings visual art critic. She teaches at the University of Tampa and blogs at Artsqueeze.com.
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