Advertisement
Meet-the-Artist reception on January 5th, which coincides with the Area Artist Annual opening reception from 1-3pm.Charlee Brodsky, a fine art/documentary photographer and emeritus professor of photography at Carnegie Mellon University,
describes her work as dealing with social issues and beauty. A selection of her awards includes the Tillie Olsen Award with writer Jim Daniels for their book, "Street;" an Emmy with the film team that created the documentary, "Stephanie," which is based on her friend’s life with breast cancer; two Pennsylvania Council on the Arts fellowships; an Honored Educator award given by the Society for Photographic Education, Mid-Atlantic Region. Among the books she’s authored are "Knowing Stephanie" and "I Thought I Could Fly."
Ms. Brodsky’s most recent work, The Audacity of the Mundane, is a series of still lifes and was exhibited at The Westmoreland Museum of American Art in 2021 and in 2024 it was exhibited at The Pittsburgh Botanic Garden, Sunnyhill Unitarian/Universalist Church in Mt. Lebanon, PA, and BE Galleries in the Lawrenceville neighborhood of Pittsburgh.
Artist Statement:
My stage is a piece of wood, the top of an old tool chest, 14” wide, 35” long, and just an inch high. It sits on a pedestal close to a window that gets filtered, rarely direct, light. Rocks, pigs, balls, flowers, binder clips, rabbits, an occasional grape tomato, and other miscellaneous things that I collected through the years, recently ordered on Ebay and/or picked up on the street, are my actors. They’re also my friends. They have personalities.
I bond less with the perfectly manufactured binder clips, but the other creatures and objects, and especially the rocks, have individual spirits that I respond to. Many have endeared themselves to me—I love the dog with half a tail; I still feel sorry for the bunny that is missing a leg; and for whatever reason, I talk and coo to the pigs. They are my perfect, imperfect collaborators that I work with to create stories of innocence, joy, affectation, impending doom, hope, as well as of other conditions that I see and partake in. Implicit in this work are my values and some commentary about the world in which I live and the world I would like to inhabit.
I started this series shortly before the COVID pandemic in 2019 and I continue it today. As the world is shaken by wars and natural disasters—interrupted by some glimmering good things, too—I go up to the studio on the third floor of my home, and with my “little friends” try to make sense of it.
Visit butlerart.com for more details
Advertisement
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
524 Wick Ave, Youngstown, OH, United States, Ohio 44502