Still Frames Transcend Time
20 Years of Independent Photographs
Introduction by Nick Welsh
Santa Barbara has long occupied a magically engineered time
warp, where the past and present wash over each other and, for the
most part, seem to peacefully coexist. Maybe it started after the
1925 earthquake, when the town’s leading citizens decided to
reinvent the hamlet as an Andalusian fantasy, rooted in a heady
cocktail of historic fact and fiction. Mostly, it has worked.
As a result, time seems to move more slowly in Santa Barbara, if
at all. For reporters covering the town, stories keep repeating
themselves — only the names change, and then only sometimes. At
The Santa Barbara Independent, we were jarred out of our
collective illusion that time’s standing still by the occasion of
our 20th anniversary in business. It’s one of those contrived
ceremonial passages that inspires reflection in even those
resistant to retrospection. Much has remained the same during the
past 20 years. But much has changed, too. The most glaring are real
estate prices. Ten years ago, a $5 million home sale would have
been headline news. But today, even suburban tract teardowns
routinely fetch $1 million.