She was working at the Tampa Museum of Art as a preparator when she noticed a scratch on a painting. She felt an inherent responsibility to fix it, being that sheโd previously worked with a restoration company and had โfallen in love with conservation.โ But itโs a competitive field so she hadnโt pursued a degree. Seeing the scratched painting was the catalyst for her to apply to graduate school for a conservation program in Cardiff, England, where she was accepted.
That anecdote helped Coderre nab a $10,000 grant from Womenโs Net, a national organization that awards monthly grants to female entrepreneurs. In October, she received its Startup Grant for her brand-new company, Coderre Conservation.
Now Coderre has the opportunity to win an additional $25,000 Amber Grant from Womenโs Net. Every year, the organization chooses one grantee to get the additional funds, partially based on how many votes they get. Voting runs through Dec. 20 via ambergrantsforwomen.com.
Coderre told Creative Loafing Tampa Bay she fell into conservation after getting her BFA in sculpture from USF. She found a job at the restoration company in Denver, where she honed her skills. After returning to Tampa and having that a-ha moment at the museum, she went to Cardiff University and recently completed her masterโs degree of science in conservation.
โConservation is the marriage between science and art,โ she said. โI feel like Iโm doing what Iโm supposed to be doing and genuinely feel like this is my thing. Iโm so lucky to have found my thing because a lot of people donโt.โ
At 31 years old, thatโs an accomplishment in itself. Coderre has been known in the Tampa Bay arts scene, throwing shows like 2014โs Pop Secret: 9:00 to 5:00 at her fatherโs office building while she was a student at USF. She was a fixture of the areaโs blended arts and music scene, playing drums for the band Broom Closet.
The Womenโs Net grant she received made starting her company possible, especially since she returned to Tampa just after Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed more than $32 million in arts and culture grants from next yearโs budget.Being fresh out of school, she didnโt have startup money, Coderre said. Conservation materials run the gamut between specialized items to things you can buy from Home Depot.
While Coderre mainly focuses on conservation projects with private collections, she recently did a job for the Dalรญ Museum and is in talks with The University of South Florida.
It was important to her to start the business in Tampa, instead of New York where sheโs had opportunities. She thinks having more conservators in the area gives Tampa credibility.
โI feel like itโs something to celebrate,โ she said. โIโm coming back to where Iโm from specifically to engage with our shared cultural heritage.โ
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This article appears in Dec 5-11, 2024.

