Recently I had the opportunity to set down with Wayne
Atherholt, St. Pete's new Director of Cultural Affairs, to chat about the
current status of St. Petersburg as a home for artists and as an arts
destination.
Wayne is a warm and charming individual will a real
love for the arts. This is the first of a
6 Post series where Wayne lays out in some detail his vision for St. Petersburg
as an Arts Destination and how all of it will come together to help artists.
My questions are
in bold.
"Tell me a
bit about your background," I began.
"I was born in Pennsylvania," Wayne began,
"Spent most of my early days there. I got my bachelors degree from Penn
State University and a Master's Degree in International Communication from
American University in Washington.
I was on a track to go into the CIA or some State
Department thing and I was working for the French News Agency in DC at the
time.
I got a book called Megatends and read it. It talked about these 10 Sunbelt
Cities that are up and coming including Tampa St. Petersburg. Something about
Tampa/St. Petersburg struck a chord with me the weather, location, daily
nonstop flights to London at the time and so I moved here after Grad School.
That brings us up to 1985.
I have worked for a number of museums, cultural
attractions. I was the first marketing Director for the Salvador Dali Museum in
the 80's and 90's. I was with the Florida International Museum, the Titanic was
my first show there, went to the Museum of Science and Industry in Tampa
heading up all of their earned income, I was the director of the Museum of Arts
and Sciences in Daytona Beach.
I got to be 50 years old and wanted to figure out what
I wanted to do when I grew up and came to the conclusion that I was happiest in
the Arts in St. Petersburg and here I am."
"Where do
you see the St. Pete artist community going in the near term?" I asked?
"I think it's on the cusp of going to the next
step and there has been a series of those steps over the years," Wayne
continued. "They are coming much closer together, if you will.
The first one was when the Arts Community was first
founded here in 1916, next was the opening of the Fine Arts Museum in 1965,
then the Dali museum in 1982. You're are starting to see these major shifts
happening more and more frequently.
I think we are really on the cusp of truly being a
place where people will come to buy and collect art, to experience cultural
facilities, to be a consumer of the cultural experience, whether it's buying a
ticket to the Dali Museum, or a performance at the Mahaffey, that kind of thing
and really having a community of artists that are creating art here.
We have a burgeoning Clay industry, we have a
burgeoning Glass industry, so I think we are on the cusp of going to that next
level without necessarily seeing a single institution leading that like the
Dali did or the International Museum did when they opened up.
It's more of a community based type thing where now
you've got multiple arts districts and really what we are looking for is more
visitors to come in and buy art."
In the next Post
Wayne talks about the Kriseman administration's new focus on the Arts Destination
and the issue of artist subsidy verses sustainability.
E-mail Doc at: mail to:dr.gwebb@yahoo.com. Or
send me a Facebook (Gene Webb) Friend request. Twitter@DOCONTHEBAY. Please
comment below, and be sure to share on Facebook and Twitter. See Doc's Photo
Gallery at Bay Post Photos
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