Charlee BrodskyProfessor
Margaret Morrison 102
cb12@andrew.cmu.eduhttp://www.charleebrodsky.com/(412) 268-1232
Charlee Brodsky, a professor of photography in the School of Design, is a fine arts and documentary photographer. Brodsky describes her work as dealing with human issues and beauty through everyday tales of life.
One of Brodsky’s current projects is on mental illness. Her work is being exhibited at mental health conferences and will be published as a book entitled
Of Anguish, Compulsion, and the Blues in the spring of 2008. Her book
Street, with poet Jim Daniels, won the 2007 Tillie Olsen Award given by the Working Class Studies Association. In 2001, she and three others won an Emmy for their work on
Stephanie, a video documentary about Stephanie Byram’s life with breast cancer. Her photographs of Stephanie were also featured in the book
Knowing Stephanie, which was one of the American Association of University Presses’ outstanding illustrated books of 2004. With anthropologist Judith Modell Schacter, Brodsky explored Homestead, a former mill town. This work resulted in the book
A Town Without Steel, Envisioning Homestead. Brodsky continues to walk Homestead streets, this time with writers Jim Daniels and Jane McCafferty.
In addition to teaching and photographing, Brodsky was a guest curator for many years at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh where she curated exhibitions dealing with photography of western Pennsylvania. This work culminated with the exhibition and book
Pittsburgh Revealed, which she curated with Linda Benedict-Jones.
Brodsky holds an MFA from the Yale University School of Art and a BA from Sarah Lawrence College.