Charlee Brodsky, a fine art documentary photographer and a professor of photography at Carnegie Mellon University, describes her work as dealing with social issues and beauty. Her most recent book, From Mall Town to Mill Town, with writers Jim Daniels and Jane McCafferty, explores the former mill-town of Homestead, Pennsylvania where a shopping mall stands where smoke stacks stood. Her book, I Thought I Could Fly… Portraits of Anguish, Compulsion, and Despair, a collection of her photographs and personal narratives by people living with mental disorders, was published by Bellevue Literary Press in the Spring, 2008. Her book, Street, a collection of her photographs and Jim Daniels’ poems, published by Bottom Dog Press in 2005, won the Tillie Olsen Award in 2007 given by the Working Class Studies Association. In 2003, the University of Pittsburgh Press published Knowing Stephanie, a book about Stephanie Byram’s life with breast cancer featuring Brodsky’s photographs. This book was one of only eight books accepted in the illustrated book category of the American Association of University Presses’ outstanding books of 2004 exhibition. In addition, in 2002 Brodsky received a regional Emmy with three others for her work on Stephanie, a documentary video. Among other projects, Brodsky photographed the former steel town of Homestead, Pennsylvania. With anthropologist Judith Modell, this project resulted in the book, A Town Without Steel, Envisioning Homestead, published by the University of Pittsburgh Press in 1998, as well as numerous exhibitions. Brodsky has also curated exhibitions dealing with the history of photography in Western Pennsylvania. This work culminated in “Pittsburgh Revealed” curated with Linda Benedict-Jones, a major exhibition at the Carnegie Museum of Art in 1997, accompanied by the book of the same name. Brodsky exhibits her work nationally and regionally, has been honored with Pennsylvania Arts Fellowships and other awards, and often works with writers and artists. In 2012 she was honored to be chosen Artist of the Year by Pittsburgh Center for the Arts.

To learn more about Charlee Brodsky, please visit her site: www.charleebrodsky.com