carlyn yandle
  • about
  • the creative process
  • crafted objects
  • public art
  • painting
  • exhibitions
  • contact

An iron will is needed now

11/4/2024

 
Working out those wrinkles is so satisfyingIf you’re uselessly wringing your hands right about now, pump some iron.
Hear me out: Ironing is useful, which, in the few days left before the US election, is the opposite position of those of us watching who can’t vote or compel Americans to vote. With democracy itself teetering on the brink it’s best to stop flitting about, pants on fire, and instead grab onto something stable and practical. Just maybe don’t do it in front of the latest broadcast of any of the mega-rich misogynists’ rallying cries; the TV screen is no match to an overhand launch of an iron.
If you’re rolling your eyes at this suggestion you may still be triggered by the iron as symbol of just more unpaid women’s housework, promoted through those post-war images of an ecstatic housewife standing before the only board she has access to. If you view her hubby’s freshly starched white shirt as his day pass out of one of those little boxes made of ticky-tacky, you are still afflicted.
I get it; letting go of the iron-as-shackles connection doesn’t come easy when you are born into that milieu. My cousin recently shared a photo of the two of us, as young as six, standing knock-kneed in skirts and knee-socks at a kid-sized ironing board, playing ironing yet there was little evidence of ironing activity in my own childhood home. This shit was insidious. 
Inflation was hitting hard those days, and the petrochemical industry found an opportunity: pushing polyester as the time-saver for women who by choice or necessity entered the workforce. When my grandmother found herself single in her 40s she traded her home-sewn floral cotton dresses for Sears Fortrel mix ’n’ match coordinates, got her teacher’s certificate and moved to a remote town for work. My McDonald’s uniform was an itchy kelly-green combo of stretch pants and striped zip-up collared top.
Skip forward a few decades and we’re barely treading water in the synthetic polymersea of fast-fashion clothing that fuels microplastic pollution.

Ironing has no role in this wrinkle-free, race-to-the-bottom system. It’s part of the repairing-is-caring continuum toward a circular economy of natural-fibre clothing and toward our own well-being. It relaxes both rumpled, creased woven cottons and linens and our fine selves. You can’t doom-scroll when you’re gliding across a soft surface, settling wrinkles with puffs of steam. Ahhhhhh. 
Quilters know all about the rewards of ironing following hours of wrestling bits of fabric into new arrangements with a temperamental sewing machine. Even the wonkiest quilt blocks in that stack “will all press out.” Ohhhmmm.
The time spent ironing favourite linens and natural-fibre clothing is an investment in those pieces, a time for personal reflection on their making and their makers. Grandma Flo may have embraced her wash-and-wear polyester pieces but she never abandoned ironing her quality dressy things or her fine cutwork table linens hand-stitched by her sisters. When it was my turn to have her over for tea she would tsk-tsk at my creased tablecloth. That it was thrifted was no excuse; all linens deserved pressing. 
A decade after her death I created a part-figurative alterpiece anchored by a Teflon iron plate. The assemblage of found objects reflects her strength in the face of tumultuous change and the little pleasures of her everyday like teatimes, decoration and costume jewelry.
Picture
Two views of “Teflon Flo”: Found lamp base, iron plate, jelly mould, tea strainer, chandelier crystals (Carlyn Yandle)
At this writing, it is Dia de los Muertos and Teflon Flo is front and centre and shining its light. A few feet away from this ofrenda is a deep scorch mark in the circa-1898 wood floor that, judging by its diminutive footprint, dates back decades. I take it as a warning from a past homemaker — I’ve conflated her with my grandmother — to unplug the iron or it will all burn down. Which I am not thinking will happen if Trump is elected. Not thinking about that at all.
Picture
A warning from decades past: Don’t let it all burn down (Carlyn Yandle)

No use fretting over earthquakes

10/2/2024

 
Hand-makers will be the change when or if 'The Big One' hits​

Of all the things I fret over — a neighbourhood arsonist, identity theft, Trump burning it all down, an all-out war in the Middle East — ‘earthquake’ is not one of them. But it may seem like I’m tempting the fates, living on the west coast of Canada. True, it’s one of the few areas in the world where three tectonic plates are sliding around and occasionally crashing into one another to the tune of 1,000 earthquakes a year. And in what seems like a death wish, my travel is mostly within the Pacific Ring of Fire. I’ve experienced minor earthquakes in Vancouver, Kyoto and Oaxaca. I arrived in Mexico City two months after the 7.1-magnitude 2017 Puebla earthquake when excavators were still clawing at the rubble of mangled apartment buildings.
Picture
From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_of_Fire
Compounding this, I’ve always lived in older wood-framed places, the kind that tremble when someone slams a door or takes a run at the stairs, even next door. I understand that it’s just a matter of time before The Big One hits this region but this information doesn’t keep me up at night. When the bedroom walls shuddered at 4:05 a.m. this past Thursday I recognized it was an earthquake and when there was no follow-up seismic activity I turned over to get some sleep. I would have got some were it not for the guy outside calling out for an escaped pet (though I’m really hoping “Michael” is not the name of that hefty Burmese python that hangs around the neck and waist of a guy in the neighbourhood.)
​

I thought about the Go Bag that I put together (radio, batteries, Biolite stove/USB port, cash, plastic trash bags, emergency blanket, Leatherman, painkillers, protein bars, Life Straw) in the bedroom closet and the footwear beside the bed, because chances are that’s where we’ll all be if we’re at home when it hits.
If/when the neighbourhood is reduced to rubble, a lot of folks will be standing around in the debris-filled street pointing their dead phones to the sky, wailing at the lack of even one bar and praying that their saviour Elon Musk is doing something. Meanwhile, I will be gathering up scraps of tarps and shower curtains and Luxury Homes Coming Soon vinyl banners to rip into strips to braid into covers and bedding. I will be collecting armloads of scrap wood, loops of downed wiring, mangled metal gutters and tree limbs to bind into building blocks. I’ll be gathering people immobilized by shock to join in on these simple projects, or just regroup around my litter-fuelled stove for tea in the warmth of my makeshift shelter.
Picture
Picture
Scaffolds I, Carlyn Yandle, 2018: The design of the city’s clutter of construction cranes inspired makeshift structural units composed of construction-site scraps — piping, cardboard, conduit cable, building wrap, hazard tape, jeans, framing wood. The panels, lashed into triangular building blocks, are explorations of shear strength and diagonal tension of units built without tools or hardware.
Maybe my lack of fear comes from seeing The Big One as the ultimate test of an art practice motivated by a something-out-of-nothing sensibility. Engaging in repetitive, tactile activity also brings a sense of calm in the face of fear: emotional survival.
Picture
Picture
Seismic Rug, 2011: petroleum-derived fabric, thread. 60”OD x 8”H (Carlyn Yandle)
Seismic Rug emerged in the hours, days and weeks following the Japan earthquake and tsunami of 2011. The rote action of braiding quelled the hand-wringing as the disaster unfolded, often in horrific real time. Undulations created by increasing and decreasing tension reflected my own moments of tension as well as the concentric waves from the undersea earthquake that led to the devastating tsunami. It was woven from a desire for quietude, reflection and meditation but it also functions as an artifact of humane activity in a worst-case scenario.
​

Rest assured that in the event of a West Coast version, while you digital-nomadic gamers and Cybertruck-owning marketing executives stand in puddles moaning over your lack of connectivity, I’ll be grappling with the physical world. I’ll be the busy lady in the barbecue-cover poncho.
    Cross-posted at
    carlynyandle.substack.com

    browse by topic:

    All
    Abject
    Abstract
    Abstract Embroidery
    Abstraction
    Abstract Painting
    Acrylic
    Activism
    Additive
    Aesthetics
    Agency
    AgentC Gallery
    Aging
    Alison Woodward
    Aluminum
    Anxiety
    Appropriation
    Arcade Fire
    Architecture
    Arleigh Wood
    Art
    Art Activism
    Art Blog
    Art Business
    Art Discourse
    Art History
    Artifact
    Artist
    Artist Residency
    Artist Statement
    Artist Talk
    Art Marketing
    Art Quilt
    Arts And Crafts
    Art School
    Art Show
    Art Spiegelman
    Assemblage
    Author
    Banksy
    Bauhaus
    Beauty
    Betsy Greer
    Big Data
    Billy Patko
    Binding
    Blogs
    Blog Tour
    Bob Krieger
    Body Of Work
    Books
    Boro
    Braided Rug
    Braiding
    Bruce MacKinnon
    Bruce Mau
    Building
    Bull Kelp
    Burlap
    Business
    Buttons
    Carlyn Yandle
    Caroline Eriksson
    Cartoon
    Ceca Georgieva
    Challenge
    Charley Yandle
    Children
    Christmas
    Cindy Sherman
    Circular Thinking
    Cirque Du Soleil
    City As Site
    City Planning
    Cityspace Gallery
    Clay Yandle
    Climate Change
    Cluster
    Cob
    Cob Oven
    Collaboration
    Collage
    Colonialism
    Color
    Colour
    Commission
    Community
    Community Building
    Composition
    Conceptual Art
    Conceptual Craft
    Connection
    Connie Sabo
    Construction
    Coronavirus
    Cosplay
    Costume
    Counter Culture
    Counter-culture
    Cover
    Cover-19
    Covid
    Craft
    Craft Blogs
    Craft Camp
    Craftivism
    Crafts
    Craftsmanship
    Creative Process
    Critique
    Crochet
    Cross-stitch
    Cultural Hub
    Cultural Studies
    Culture
    Culture Jamming
    Culturejammingc9d75664fd
    Current Conditions
    Cycling
    Dafen Village
    Dallas-duobaitis
    Dance
    Data-graphic
    Data-graphic
    David Weir
    Dear Human
    Decorations
    Deep Craft
    Denim
    Denyse Thomasos
    Design
    Digital Art
    Discomforter
    Display
    Dissent
    Distraction
    Distracts
    DIY
    Doilies
    Doily
    Domestic
    Domestic Interventions
    Douglas-coupland
    Draw Down
    Drawing
    Dressed
    DSquared2
    Dude-chilling-park
    Dyeing
    Dystopia
    Eastend
    Eastside Culture Crawl
    ECUAD
    ECUAD MFA
    Editorial
    Edward Burtynsky
    Eggbeater Creative
    Embellishment
    Embroidery
    Emily Blincoe
    Emily Carr Cozy
    Emily Carr University
    Entanglements
    Environment
    Environmental Art
    Exhibit
    Exhibition
    Expanded Painting
    Experimentation
    Exploration
    Expression
    Fabric
    Fabricating
    Fabrication
    Facebook
    Failure
    Fashion
    Fashion Revolution
    Fast Fashion
    Feminisim
    Feminist
    Feminist Art
    Festival
    Fiber
    Fiber Artist
    Fiber Arts
    Fibre
    Fibre Arts
    Film
    First Saturday Open Studios
    Flo
    Flow
    Forage
    Foraging
    Form
    Form And Function
    Foundlings
    Found Materials
    Found Objects
    Fractal
    Free Store
    Fuckwit
    Fuzzy Logic
    Gallery
    Gallery-row
    Garden
    Gardening
    Garment
    Gathering
    Gentrification
    Geometric Art
    Gill Benzion
    Gingerbread
    Globalization
    Glue
    Goblin Core
    Grad 2020
    Graffiti
    Grannycore
    Granny Square
    Granville-island
    Green Space
    Grid
    Grief
    Guanajuato
    Guerrilla Art
    Guerrilla Girls
    Halloween
    Handmade
    Handmaking
    Hand Stitching
    Hand-stitching
    Handwork
    Hashtags
    Haywood Bandstand
    Healing
    Health
    Hearth
    Heirloom
    Hideki-kuwajima
    Homelessness
    Homemade
    Hot Art Wet City
    Housing
    Hybrid Thinking
    Ian Reid
    Ian Wallace
    Ideas
    Identity
    Images
    Imagination
    Immersive Art
    Improvisation
    Incomplete Manifesto For Growth
    Industrial Design
    Industry
    Innovation
    Inspiration
    Instagram
    Installation
    Installation Art
    Intervention
    Intrusive Thoughts
    Invention
    Irena Werning
    Ironing
    Janet Wang
    Jeans
    Jeff Wilson
    Joel Bakan
    Joseph Beuys
    Joseph-wu
    Journalism
    Joyful Making In Perilous Times
    Joyfulmakinginperiloustimes
    Judith Scott
    Kamala Harris
    Kids Art
    Kim Piper Werker
    Kimsooja
    Kintsugi
    Knitting
    Knots
    Knotting
    Kyoto
    Labor
    Labour
    LA Fires
    Landon Mackenzie
    Landscape
    Leanne Prain
    Lecture
    Lighthouse
    Linen
    Liz Magor
    Log Cabin
    Logo Sweater
    LOoW
    Lost Painting
    Lumiere Festival
    Lynda Barry
    Macrame
    Maker
    Making
    MakingIsConnecting
    Malcolm Gladwell
    Male Gaze
    Mapping
    Maquette
    Marie Kondo
    Marketing
    Mark Lewis
    Martha Rosler
    Martha Stewart
    Masks
    Material Exploration
    Mathematics
    Maya
    Media
    Meditation
    Meditative
    Mending
    Mend In Public Day
    Mental Health
    Metalworker
    MFA
    Mister Rogers
    Mixed Media
    Mobile Art Practice
    Monique Motut-Firth
    Monster
    Monte Clark
    Mosaic
    Motivation
    Mt. Pleasant Community Centre
    Mud Girls
    Mural
    Mushroom
    Mycelium
    Narrative
    Natalie Jeremijenko
    Nature
    Needlework
    Neon
    Net
    Network
    Networking
    Neuroplasticity
    New Forms Festival
    Newspapers
    Nick Cave
    Noah Goodis
    North Vancouver
    Obtrusive Thoughts
    Omer Arbel
    Online Talk
    Openings
    Organization
    Origami
    #overthinking
    Paint
    Painting
    Pandemic
    Paper
    Paper Sculpture
    Papier Mache
    Parkade Quilt
    Patchwork
    Patriarchy
    Pattern
    Pecha Kucha
    Pechakucha
    Perception
    Perfectionism
    Performance
    Performance Art
    Personalispolitical
    Photography
    Playing
    Political Art
    Political Satire
    Polly-apfelbaum
    Pompidou
    Poodle
    Port Coquitlam
    Portrait
    Practice
    Process
    Production
    Profession
    Project
    Protest
    Protest Art
    Psychedelic
    Public Art
    Pussy Hat
    Pussy-hat
    Qr Code
    Quilt
    Quilt Block
    Quilting
    Quilt Painting
    Rachael Ashe
    Rachel Lafo
    Ravages
    Raw Materials
    Rebar
    Recycle
    Recycling
    Reflection
    Reflektor
    Reimagine
    Renewal
    Repairing Is Caring
    RepairingIsCaring
    Research
    Residency
    Resistance
    Resurge
    Retreat
    Re-use
    Rhonda Weppler
    Richard-tetrault
    Richmond Art Gallery
    Right Brain
    Rondle-west
    Roses Against Violence
    Rote Activity
    Rug
    Ryan-mcelhinney
    Safe Supply
    Safety
    Sampler
    Sarah-gee-miller
    Sashiko
    Saskatchewan
    Scaffolds
    Scaffolds I
    Scale
    Scraps
    Sculpture
    Seasonal Decor
    Seattle Art Museum
    Seaweed
    Seismic Rug
    Semiotics
    Sewing
    SharingIsCaring
    Sharon Kallis
    Shawn Hunt
    Shigeru Ban
    Sketchup
    Slow Craft
    Smocking
    Social Art
    Socialart
    Social Distancing
    Social Distancing Hat
    Social Engagement
    Social-engagement
    Social History
    Social Justice
    Social Media
    Soft Sculpture
    South-granville
    Space Craft
    Spore
    Stitching
    Storage
    Street Art
    Studio
    Styrophobe
    Subversive Stitch
    Surrealism
    Surrey
    Tactical Frivolity
    Tactility
    Tagging
    Talking Art
    Tapestry
    Tattoo
    Teamlab
    Technology
    Terry Fox Theatre
    Text
    Textile
    Textile Art
    Textiles
    Thrifting
    Thrift Stores
    @tinypricksproject
    Tiny Pricks Project
    TJ Watt
    TO DO
    Tools
    Toronto Design Offsite
    Toybits
    Trash
    Trash Art
    Travel Art
    Trevor Mahovsky
    Trump
    Typography
    Tyvek
    Unbridled
    Unfixtures
    Upcycle
    Upcycling
    Urban Design
    Use Object
    Use Objects
    Utility
    Value Village
    Vancouver
    Vancouver Art Gallery
    Vancouver International Airport
    Video
    Video Tour
    Visual Field
    Visual-field
    Visual Language
    Wabi-sabi
    Wallace Stegner House
    Wall Hanging
    Waterwork
    Wearable Art
    Weaving
    William Morris
    Women's March
    Wood
    Wool
    Work Wraps
    Wrap I
    Wrap II
    Writing
    Xenobia Bailey
    Yarn Bombing
    YVR
    Zaha Hadid
    Zendoodle
    Zero Waste Art
    Zero-waste Art

    Archives

    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    October 2022
    August 2022
    June 2022
    November 2021
    April 2021
    September 2020
    April 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    April 2019
    November 2018
    July 2018
    May 2018
    November 2017
    September 2017
    June 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    September 2016
    July 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011
    August 2011
    June 2011
    May 2011
    April 2011
    March 2011

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
Picture