Artist: Chuck Hooker | Location: Charleston, SC
Simply complete the form below, and be sure to include your mobile number so you can vote via text. To activate your votes, check in at the Welcome Center (132 North Acline Street), TRAX Visual Art Center, Jones-Carter Gallery, or The ROB during the festival.
Login to your account to vote for the People's Choice Awards. When casting your votes, remember you may vote for as many pieces of artwork as you like, but you're only allowed one vote per artwork.
Artist: Chuck Hooker | Location: Charleston, SC
Charleston, SC
Chuck Hooker was born and has lived most of his life in Charleston, SC. His family has roots that run deep in the community's past. He received his BS in Biology from the College of Charleston in 1980, and his M.Ed. in Outdoor Education Administration in 2001 from Georgia College and State University.
As a young boy, he was fascinated with the outdoors and the photographic process. He had a primitive darkroom (a closet) before the age of 10. In 1972, he received his first 35mm camera, and by 1973 he had received regional recognition in the Scholastic Art Awards competition. The camera gave him the freedom to explore and record the beauty of the surrounding Lowcountry. In 1980, he began working for Jacobs Photo, which afforded him the opportunity to be mentored by some of the best professional photographers in the area. Happily, many of those friendships continue to this day.
Chuck’s primary artistic interest is natural history photography, that is, the plants, animals, and environmental elements that make up our world. In this day where everything seems to have been photographed and Instagrammed to exhaustion, he looks for unique, unseen perspectives. He often tells people that "You will not find me when I work. I am where and when you are not."
His work has been shown in the Gibbes Museum of Art, the City Gallery at Waterfront Park, and the Avery Research Institute. Recent publications include “Landscape Photography” magazine (UK) and “Charleston Magazine.”