Former Hudson resident, Dolwain Green, shares his and his late wife’s adventurous vision of the natural world in this powerful exhibit. The photos were captured in remote and faraway regions in the United States, Canada, New Zealand’s South Island, South Africa, Botswana, Namibia, and Morocco; some were also taken in La Jolla, California where Dolwain now lives.
Date/Time: The exhibit will be on display through October 28.
Location: In person, Hudson Area Library Community Room
Registration: No registration necessary. All are welcome!
Photo credit: Dolwain Green
A partnership with The Hudson Eye.
Dolwain Green was born in Montego Bay, Jamaica, and moved to Hudson, New York when he was 12 years old. After graduating from Hudson High School he attended the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia (PENN) from 1977-81. Prior to completing his bachelor’s degree, he took time off to travel, met his wife, Suzanne, and transferred to Cal State University San Marcos in San Diego, where he completed his bachelor’s degree in Cultural History with additional emphasis in Education and Technology. The focus of his degree was on the migration paths of people of African descent from Africa throughout the Caribbean and United States.
Although Dolwain enjoys capturing a variety of subjects, his primary photographic interests are of natural formations, landscapes, animal life and urban scenes. Images that depict cultural stories are of special interest too. Dolwain was selected to display his images in juried art exhibits, including twice for the San Diego Art Institute’s Best of Nature show at the Ordover Gallery at the San Diego Natural History Museum in Balboa Park, and several solo shows at the Mission Trails Regional Park Visitors Center complex as part of their art exhibit program. His Scripps Pier image is currently on display at Scripps Hospital Family Clinic in Rancho Bernardo. Dolwain thanks his immediate and extended families and his friends for their support and encouragement of his photographic endeavor, and is excited to share this exhibit in his former hometown of Hudson.