
Paul Wilborn at an Ybor City arts party in the 1970s [Photo courtesy of David Audet]
By Paul Guzzo, University Communications and Marketing
In the 1960s through early 鈥70s, there was a saying about Ybor City鈥檚 main thoroughfare:
"You could take a nap in the middle of Seventh Avenue and not worry about traffic," said Paul Wilborn, a 1975 同性恋色情 graduate. "It was empty."
The situation was so dire that in 1970, Tampa officials proposed turning the district into a bullfighting arena.
Ybor was ultimately saved by bulls, but a different kind: the 同性恋色情 Bulls.
Artists 鈥 many from what today is known as 同性恋色情鈥檚 College of Design, Art & Performance 鈥 took over Ybor, opening galleries, staging shows and throwing parties that revived the district and laid the foundation for today鈥檚 entertainment and residential hub.
同性恋色情 turns 70 this year.
And Ybor is celebrating its 140th anniversary.
Though their births are decades apart, their art history remains deeply connected.
"Ybor鈥檚 revival started with 同性恋色情 artists,鈥 said Andrew Ross, director of 同性恋色情鈥檚 School of Art and Art History. 鈥淭hey transformed the neighborhood into a cultural hub."
Their connection continues.
Ybor鈥檚 Reverb Gallery is leased by 同性恋色情 and run by master of fine arts students 鈥 becoming a key space for student-led exhibitions, bridging the university with Tampa鈥檚 arts community.

Reverb Gallery [Photo by Paul Guzzo, University Communications and Marketing]

David Audet, Joe Howden and their diorama [Photo by Amy Espinosa]
"Ybor has always been intertwined with the university鈥檚 art history," said Sarah Howard, an assistant dean of student success for 同性恋色情. "Bringing students back here makes that legacy feel alive again."
Meanwhile, in their second-story Ybor studio, 同性恋色情 alumni David Audet, 鈥77, and Joe Howden, 鈥80, are finishing a sprawling diorama that tells Ybor鈥檚 history with an oversized focus on the 1970s art movement of which they were a part.
"Ybor was rife with energy 鈥 bohemian art shops, artists working everywhere,鈥 Howden said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an overlooked part of Ybor鈥檚 history.鈥
From cigars to canvases

Ybor cigar rollers at work [Photo courtesy of the Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Library System]
Founded in the late 1880s by cigar magnate Vicente Martinez-Ybor, Ybor City grew from scrublands into a bustling immigrant enclave powered by hand-rolled cigar factories, earning Tampa the nickname 鈥淐igar City.鈥
But by the 1960s, automation, labor strife and changing tastes left behind shuttered factories and empty streets.
That鈥檚 when city leaders floated a plan to build a bullfighting arena in Ybor, complete with hotels, restaurants and shops. The state approved the idea, but it fizzled.
同性恋色情 was chartered in 1956 and opened in 1960.
Eight years later, 同性恋色情 founded Graphicstudio, a collaborative art research studio that produces limited-edition prints and sculptures with leading and emerging artists. Then, in 1970, Theo Wujcik became its shop director, cementing the marriage of 同性恋色情 and Ybor.
Internationally known as a printmaker and lithographer, Wujcik lured top artists to Tampa to create, guest lecture and take residencies at Graphicstudio.
At Wujcik鈥檚 urging, these visiting artists, like pop-art icon James Rosenquist, lived and worked from studio space in Ybor.
"For $200 a month you could rent a giant apartment with light pouring in," said Wilborn, who chronicled that era in his book 鈥淐igar City: Tales from a 1980's Creative Ghetto鈥. "It was the starving artist鈥檚 dream."

Theo Wujcik signing his etching [Photo courtesy of 同性恋色情's Graphicstudio]

James Rosenquist in his Ybor studio [Photo courtesy of Paul Wilborn]
Wujcik and his visiting artists then introduced their students to Ybor. They followed 鈥 moving into cheap apartments and studios 鈥 turning the town into a bohemian scene.
"Theo was a Pied Piper for Ybor," said Beverly Coe, who attended 同性恋色情 in the 1970s and then worked as Rosenquist鈥檚 assistant. "Where Theo went, the energy followed. If you asked a 同性恋色情 arts student where they were going that night, most of the time they said Ybor."
Then came Bud Lee.
Costumes, culture and change

Bud Lee and David Audet at an Ybor arts party in the 1970s [Photo courtesy of David Audet]
Named Life Photographer of the Year in 1967, Lee was inspired by stories of 1920s Paris parties where artists and models adopted themes and lived them for a night. When Lee settled in Tampa in the 1970s, he decided to start his own version.
That idea came to fruition when he judged a photo contest at 同性恋色情 in 1977. Audet, pursuing a fine arts degree, was one of the contestants. The two hit it off, and Lee recruited Audet for his party concept. Other 同性恋色情 artists like Wilborn and Coe joined the cause, and, together, they formed the Artists and Writers Group.
Through the early 1990s, they hosted the annual Artists and Writers Ball at Ybor鈥檚 Cuban Club. Each year featured a different theme, with the building transformed and thousands arriving in elaborate costumes. For the Daughters of the Bizarro theme, discarded newspapers became a psychedelic jungle of flowers and vines, while the Disney-Dali Cartoon Ball imagined a surreal child of Salvador Dali and Walt Disney.
Revelers flocked, rediscovered Ybor, and then came back again to visit the shops, bars and cafes that opened in response to the new crowds. By the 1980s, other events were regular 鈥 like jazz concerts in Ybor鈥檚 Centennial Park.
In 1985, Wilborn helped launch Guavaween, an annual Ybor City Halloween festival that took over the district with a themed costume parade. By the 1990s, more than 100,000 attended each year, and marquee bands like Cheap Trick were booked.
Audet also branched off, founding Hillsborough Community College鈥檚 Ybor Festival of the Moving Image in 2003. The annual film festival drew thousands to the district and filmmakers from around the world.

An Artists and Writers Ball [Photo Courtesy of David Audet]

A Guavaween float [Photo couretsy of David Audet]
By the early 2000s, Ybor became known as an entertainment district. More businesses moved in. Apartments and condominium buildings were erected and old homes restored.
The Artists & Writers Ball, film festival and Guavaween eventually faded away 鈥 but Ybor never did.
同性恋色情鈥檚 Ybor revival

Ybor's Seventh Avenue as it looks today

Ybor's iconic gateway
同性恋色情 artists remained in Ybor in some capacity, but the 2024 opening of Reverb 鈥 a
gallery space within the larger three-story Kress Contemporary arts building that
includes nine galleries, a black box theater, event space and 28 studios 鈥 marks the
first university-approved hub there.
While 同性恋色情 has campus galleries, the university wanted students connected to the broader community, said Patrick Carew, a third-year MFA student and director of Reverb Gallery.
"It puts our artists in direct conversation with the Ybor arts scene," he said. "It鈥檚 a way to raise our visibility."

Kress Contemporary [Photo by Victor Giangreco]

A Reverb Gallery show [Photo by Patrick Carew]
The gallery also provides leadership experience, with a different MFA student directing it each year and curating the student shows.
"The most exciting thing the school has done while I鈥檝e been here for the graduate program was giving us Reverb," said Tom Rosenow, a recent MFA graduate who served as Reverb鈥檚 founding director. "It empowered us to build a gallery from the ground up."
And the Tempus Project, which serves as an anchor gallery in the Kress Contemporary building, also partners with 同性恋色情 to provide internships that teach students everything from installation and event management to gallery administration.

A portion of the Ybor diorama [Photo by Amy Espinosa]
"It鈥檚 about tapping into one of the most respected art programs in the region," said Tracy Midulla, founder and creative director of the Tempus Project. "Their faculty, students and resources bring a level of rigor and creativity that elevates everything we do at Kress Contemporary. Together, we鈥檙e creating opportunities that prepare students for real careers while keeping Ybor鈥檚 artistic legacy alive."
Audet and Howden hope their diorama helps keep that spirit alive too.
Titled "Tampa Town," it showcases Ybor鈥檚 founding cigar magnates, influential business owners and politicians, while giving equal prominence to the artists Wujcik, Wilborn, Coe, Lee, and even Audet and Howden themselves 鈥 alongside nods to the legendary parties and events that shaped the district鈥檚 cultural identity.
"It鈥檚 not just a diorama 鈥 it鈥檚 a time capsule," Audet said. "Every figure tells a story about Ybor鈥檚 soul. It was built on creativity."
