The confidence she gained through showcasing her work at the LIDO propelled her to submit pieces to local and regional competitions, join other artists’ communities, and exhibit in other galleries. Today, Critchley regularly outsells other artists by more than double at competitive shows. She’s placed in the top 100 at national painting competitions. And, she’s one of the highest-selling artists at the LIDO.
Aleta’s transformation from kitchen-table hobbyist to award-winning fine artist shows how small business accelerators like the LIDO can help give entrepreneurs the confidence they need to turn passion projects into budding business initiatives.
What is a Small Business Accelerator?
Small business accelerators are physical or virtual spaces that support individual business growth along with broader economic development. By providing emerging entrepreneurs with resources, mentorship, and market access, small business accelerators jumpstart small businesses toward successful and sustainable trajectories. Examples include pop-up shops, co-working spaces, shared commercial kitchens, business incubators, or entrepreneurial education centers.
For artists and makers, these programs often take the form of retail spaces that also offer professional education and built-in community and networking opportunities.
Launching and Sustaining a Small Business Accelerator
The LIDO Collective was born when Mount Vernon Downtown Association’s Executive Director Ellen Gamson saw how the pandemic was devastating local artists, most of whom were ineligible for small business loans. Mount Vernon is home to a rich artistic community, so she knew the downtown association had to act.
“We’d always worked closely with local artists,” Gamson explains. “But we kept thinking: what could we actually do to help?”
Through a nonprofit community recovery grant from the state commerce department, the downtown association found a home in a commercial office building that was once a historic theater called the LIDO. Though the property was on a corner lot in the primary retail corridor, it was occupied by a local political party which meant it was only used for a few months out of the year, and it had fallen into disrepair.
“A secondary interest of ours was recharacterizing that space from office space to retail and something more interactive,” says Gamson.
Gamson and her team worked closely with the property owner to remodel the space. They installed all-new flooring, painted, and worked with a local lighting designer to add gallery-grade track lighting.