Credit: Courtesy

In many ways, 1990 saw the culmination of Santa Barbara’s great environmental awakening. After 20 years of lawsuits and lobbying, the United States Congress amended the Clean Air Act to give local jurisdictions control over the regulation of offshore oil drilling, a result clearly descended from Santa Barbara’s response to the 1969 oil spill. At the same time activists were celebrating this victory, a trio of women began their own form of environmental action from the back of a Volvo station wagon and out of a garage in Montecito.

Bari Romoy, Irene Falzone, and Lynn Seigel-Boettner founded Art From Scrap 30 years ago when creative reuse was a rare concept and upcycling wasn’t even a word yet. Sensing that the need for art materials for children’s school projects was not being met through traditional channels, these three women set out to discover what industrial Santa Barbara was throwing away and to imagine what artists might do with it. Combing through piles of refuse headed for the landfill, they discovered beauty in the odd bits left over after multiple projects and products were finished. As it turned out, the city contained hidden treasure troves of useful discards, from surplus paper and paint to objects such as silicone skateboard wheels that could become points of departure for assemblage artworks. Working together to scavenge, sort, and repurpose what they found, these women founded an organization and a way of looking at the world that continues to thrive 30 years later.


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