
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Chrissy Levett is the founder & creative director of Creative Conscience, a global platform that encourages, trains, and rewards creative thinking for social justice, sustainability, and many other issues.
She is also a TEDx speaker, lecturer, and educator, who believes that design & creative thinking should be used to solve global challenges and as a form of positive activism.
Her motivationChrissy worked for NGOs in the field in a developing world using graphics to teach people around the issues of landmines and, and repeat getting refugees repatriated into different countries. Then, some of those kids and she ended up working in a big agency in London where she felt she was creating products that weren’t at all helping in the future.
After going through a rough patch in her life, and not feeling fulfilled, Chrissy started on a journey of self-curiosity and self-learning. Through consciousness, she was taking time to sit and work out what you love and what isn’t working. Chrissy emerged feeling there had to be a better way of designing, building, and manufacturing products that were beneficial to the future and would have a better impact on people and the environment. That’s where Creative Conscience was born. She ended creating a platform for the world without any media budget, no funding or anything else. But she learned she was able to change the world just with her actions.
“And where do you start? Well, Nelson Mandela said the greatest weapon that we have to change the world is education. So if we can build from the ground up, which is what we started 10 years ago. Now, those young people are kind of infiltrating our industry as positive creative activists and they're changing organizations and agencies from, from inside.”
Chrissy referred to a project that came in this year from Jonathan Ford, from the Danish school. He worked with the green party, the alternative party in Denmark. The project is called The Ice Poster. It changed the course of the conversation in their government. So his idea changed the election. The policy changed the conversation for that country and that is something that deserves to be celebrated.
Chrissy believes that our current academic system is too focused on consumption and finance money and that it is time to look to other ways of thinking. And for that, there is also a need for mentors.
And how to become one? Well easily: If you have something that you're really passionate about, say you're someone who has been in the corporate world and you've got some experience, you could mentor someone who might want to start a social enterprise or a business where you might have a challenge that you feel is really important. It might be around the environment. It doesn’t have to be completely specific to your fields, just something that you’re truly passionate about and help other young people.
5
1515 ratings
Chrissy Levett is the founder & creative director of Creative Conscience, a global platform that encourages, trains, and rewards creative thinking for social justice, sustainability, and many other issues.
She is also a TEDx speaker, lecturer, and educator, who believes that design & creative thinking should be used to solve global challenges and as a form of positive activism.
Her motivationChrissy worked for NGOs in the field in a developing world using graphics to teach people around the issues of landmines and, and repeat getting refugees repatriated into different countries. Then, some of those kids and she ended up working in a big agency in London where she felt she was creating products that weren’t at all helping in the future.
After going through a rough patch in her life, and not feeling fulfilled, Chrissy started on a journey of self-curiosity and self-learning. Through consciousness, she was taking time to sit and work out what you love and what isn’t working. Chrissy emerged feeling there had to be a better way of designing, building, and manufacturing products that were beneficial to the future and would have a better impact on people and the environment. That’s where Creative Conscience was born. She ended creating a platform for the world without any media budget, no funding or anything else. But she learned she was able to change the world just with her actions.
“And where do you start? Well, Nelson Mandela said the greatest weapon that we have to change the world is education. So if we can build from the ground up, which is what we started 10 years ago. Now, those young people are kind of infiltrating our industry as positive creative activists and they're changing organizations and agencies from, from inside.”
Chrissy referred to a project that came in this year from Jonathan Ford, from the Danish school. He worked with the green party, the alternative party in Denmark. The project is called The Ice Poster. It changed the course of the conversation in their government. So his idea changed the election. The policy changed the conversation for that country and that is something that deserves to be celebrated.
Chrissy believes that our current academic system is too focused on consumption and finance money and that it is time to look to other ways of thinking. And for that, there is also a need for mentors.
And how to become one? Well easily: If you have something that you're really passionate about, say you're someone who has been in the corporate world and you've got some experience, you could mentor someone who might want to start a social enterprise or a business where you might have a challenge that you feel is really important. It might be around the environment. It doesn’t have to be completely specific to your fields, just something that you’re truly passionate about and help other young people.
6 Listeners
2 Listeners
0 Listeners