For twenty years, Charlie Hodges heeded his creative calling to dance at the highest level. With roles in acclaimed Broadway productions and as part of Twyla Tharp’s legendary repertory company, his trek to the peak of that profession was grueling to say the least. Charlie endured waves of intensely personal rejection – oftentimes targeting his body type and appearance. But he ultimately prevailed, thanks to his abundance of talent, perseverance and incredibly high pain threshold.
Most people would be more than satisfied with those achievements. But for Charlie, that was simply act one. He then pivoted – or, more accurately, pirouetted – toward a completely new creative métier: product design. Drawing on his lifelong passion for architecture, he enrolled in ArtCenter’s Product Design program.
His natural creative abilities and propensity for hard work continued to serve him well. Charlie developed Urbanette, a sustainable dollhouse, as part of an ArtCenter project sponsored by a major toy company, for which he received a prestigious IDSA award. He recently delivered a remarkably vulnerable and wise TEDx talk on the resilience he acquired pursuing a career in dance with an unconventional body type. And, finally, true to his commitment to excellence, Charlie graduated from ArtCenter College of Design as the summer 2018 valedictorian.
In this episode, Charlie and ArtCenter President Lorne Buchman discuss his hard-won ascent to the top of the dance world, the evolution of his passion for design, his lifelong belief in the power of persistence and his new passion for designing toys that can influence change.
Learn more about Charlies's work:
https://www.charliehodges.design http://ladanceproject.org https://www.twylatharp.org https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrEDTelG_9U http://broadwaymusicalhome.com/shows/movinout.htmLearn more about this episode of Change Lab at www.artcenter.edu.
10 Yves Behar on Creating and Designing through Technology
09 Paula Scher on Conjuring Instantly Recognizable Design
08 Amy Ziering on Giving Voice to Survivors of Sexual Abuse
07 Wendy MacNaughton on Telling Stories Through Illustration and Text
06 Niklas Gustafsson on Creating Meaningful Brand Stories
05 Mari Nakano - Using Design for the Social Good
04 Sara Khoury - Designing for the User and Human Experience
03 Edgar Arceneaux - Using Critical Thinking to Share Stories
02 John X. Carey - Balancing Art and Commerce in Film
01 Lynda Weinman - Taking Arts Education Online
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