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No Plastic Please: An Artist’s Plastic Fast

Remember that resolution to stop eating junk food, or scaling back on late night treats, or promising to recycle more? Nearly ten years ago, Bryant Holsenbeck made a commitment to giving up single-use plastic for an entire year. 

host Franks Stasio talks with author Bryant Holsenbeck about the world's plastic consumption and her journey in kicking the plastic habit. 

This goal cost her many of her usual comforts and left her looking for new eco-friendly ways to exist in the world. During her one year plastic fast, Holsenbeck wrote a blog and shared her story with anyone who logged on: from complaints about not being able to eat cookies or crackers because of their plastic packaging, to excitement over buying in bulk.

As a longtime artist, she even incorporated this temporary way of life into her art. She began as a basketmaker, but for the past decade she has been collecting plastic waste in the form of plastic bags, bottle caps, and other “trash” to create art. Holsenbeck shares her journey in the book, “The Last Straw: A Continuing Quest for Life Without Disposable Plastic” (RCWMS Press/2018).

She joins host Franks Stasio to share her personal evolution and explain how the plastic-free movement is finally catching on. Holsenbeck will host a reading at Flyleaf books in Chapel Hill on Thursday, March 21 at 7 p.m. Orange County Public Library in Hillsborough will host a screening of the documentary “Straws” followed by a reading and reception with Holsenbeck on Tuesday, March 26 as part of “Skip The Straw” month. Her next exhibit opens May 18 at the Craven Allen Gallery in Durham

Recycled bottlecap mandala - Addlestone Library College of Charleston
Courtesy of Bryant Holsenbeck /
Recycled bottlecap mandala - Addlestone Library College of Charleston
Stuff, Where Does It Come From Where Does It Go? NC State Gregg Museum
Courtesy of Bryant Holsenbeck /
Stuff, Where Does It Come From Where Does It Go? NC State Gregg Museum
Purifed the River In the Desert.  Ellen Noelle Musem Midland, Texas
Courtesy of Bryant Holsenbeck /
Purifed the River In the Desert. Ellen Noelle Musem Midland, Texas
Plastic bottle waterfall made from over 10,000 plastic bottles collected by the community at Buck's County Community College in Pennsylvania.
Courtesy of Bryant Holsenbeck /
Plastic bottle waterfall made from over 10,000 plastic bottles collected by the community at Buck's County Community College in Pennsylvania.
Sea Rooster, made of ocean detritus
Courtesy of Bryant Holsenbeck /
Sea Rooster, made of ocean detritus
Bryant Holsenbeck giving her first talk at the Durham Scrap Exchange.
Courtesy of Bryant Holsenbeck /
Bryant Holsenbeck giving her first talk at the Durham Scrap Exchange.

Copyright 2019 North Carolina Public Radio

Longtime NPR correspondent Frank Stasio was named permanent host of The State of Things in June 2006. A native of Buffalo, Frank has been in radio since the age of 19. He began his public radio career at WOI in Ames, Iowa, where he was a magazine show anchor and the station's News Director.
Dana is an award-winning producer who began as a personality at Rock 92. Once she started creating content for morning shows, she developed a love for producing. Dana has written and produced for local and syndicated commercial radio for over a decade. WUNC is her debut into public radio and she’s excited to tell deeper, richer stories.