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Sharon Hester

Sharon’s artwork is entwined with her passion for wildlife and conservation. She works full-time as a wildlife biologist, but spends many of her off hours in her art studio in Lake City, Florida. She has earned signature membership in the Colored Pencil Society of America and in the Society of Animal Artists.

Sharon primarily uses colored pencils and graphite to capture her subjects because she enjoys the versatility, range of effects, and details that can be accomplished with pencils. Her art illustrates her curiosity and exploration of the cosmos—the beauty and order of the universe. Her work is a combination of objectivity and subjectivity, detail and accuracy interconnected with wonder and fascination, scientific inquiry mixed with beauty and mood. She is inspired by the forms, details, colors, and drama of the natural world.

For Sharon, artistic discovery is all about taking the time to truly see this world and making the effort to record it, whether it’s a close encounter with a beautiful animal, or a ray of sunlight that transforms the subject from mundane to amazing.

Cheri Erdman and Carson Kapp

Cheri Erdman

Before retirement, Cheri worked as a college counselor, educator, psychotherapist, and author. The focus on words — speaking, listening, reading, writing — communicated ideas, feelings and emotions. These are what inform her work as an abstract expressionist painter who does not paint from a visual reference but from her inner world, weaving the unconscious with the conscious.

She is an exhibiting gallery artist with The Hub on Canal and an invited member of Beaux Arts of Central Florida.

She has had two exhibits with Fred Goldstein, a metal sculptor artist, that explored the relationship between abstract painting and abstract sculpture: the first in 2020 at the Hub on Canal and the other in 2023 at the News-Journal Center in Daytona Beach, FL.

She has had one solo exhibit in 2025 at the Hub on Canal, “The Zen of Black and White Art”

 

Carson Kapp

Because she was an architect in her career life, Carson’s design process builds upon her knowledge of the history of art and architecture. In her warehouse studio, she awakens her heart, flourishes her creative spark and spontaneously plays with color. Every time she got laid off from her architecture jobs, she picked up her paintbrush and has painted seriously for years, winning awards in venues in the United States and internationally. You can see her joy-filled pieces @kappcarson on Instagram and her website carsonkapp.weebly.com.

Exhibits will remain open in the galleries for the public’s enjoyment through Wednesday, February 18, 2026. For more information, call 229.247.2787 or visit turnercenter.org. Patrons who need special assistance may contact the Center to make those arrangements.