Cheryl Crane-Hunter’s work is rooted in stillness and symbolism. With a background in art education and a deep connection to the natural world, she creates art that invites the viewer to slow down. Her style isn’t loud or ornamental — it’s reflective, intentional, and full of small discoveries. You’ll find trees, birds, waves, and sky. You’ll also find something unspoken: the pull of something deeper.
Her passion for nature comes through clearly, but it’s more than visual reference. It’s about the peace that nature can offer. The rhythm of water, the curve of a branch, the glow of the moon — in Cheryl’s world, these are not just subjects but messages. She leans into quiet beauty, the kind that doesn’t shout for attention but holds it gently. For Cheryl, art isn’t decoration. It’s healing. A moment to breathe. A moment to feel connected again — to earth, to spirit, to self.

The Work: “The Tree of Life”
Cheryl Crane-Hunter’s Tree of Life is a mixed media piece that doesn’t try to explain everything at once. Instead, it invites you to look slowly, and let the layers unfold. Measuring 18 by 24 inches, it blends painting with gold leaf — a technique that gives the work a sense of quiet luminosity.
At the center is a tree. Its limbs stretch wide, curling like waves or veins. The tree isn’t hyper-realistic — it’s symbolic. It forms a visual rhythm across the canvas, echoing growth, branching, reaching. Gold leaf flows through the trunk and the limbs, connecting moon phases like a kind of visual path. This shimmering thread gives the piece movement, pulling the eye from one section to the next, and suggesting that time and energy are always flowing.
Perched near the center is a bird — bright and bold, painted with care. It sits confidently on the full moon, the way a thought might land in stillness. Cheryl says the bird symbolizes strength and individuality, and you can feel that in its posture. It isn’t lost in the tree — it’s part of it, but distinct. This is not a passive symbol. The bird is aware, alert, still — but ready.
Then there’s the rainbow. It arcs in and out of the tree like a protective layer. Not just for decoration — it acts as a spiritual link, a connection between earth and something higher. In Cheryl’s own words, it’s there to “connect us to the divine.” That idea is central to the piece. The work doesn’t force belief, but it offers a space to consider it. It creates a mood that feels both grounding and elevated.
The moon phases in the painting also carry quiet weight. They are part of the visual rhythm but also reminders of time passing — of cycles, reflection, and change. They serve as a backdrop, but also as inner markers. The tree, the moon, the bird, the rainbow — each element stands on its own but also functions as part of a larger system.
There’s something steadying about the way Cheryl brings these elements together. They don’t compete. They coexist. Her use of color is calm and deep — blues and greens suggest nature and peace, while the gold and reds offer warmth and vitality.
Cheryl’s Tree of Life is more than a symbolic diagram — it’s a feeling. A visual poem. It doesn’t require explanation, but it rewards attention. It creates a space where you can pause, breathe, and reconnect — to nature, to your own strength, and to something beyond yourself. And that’s the heart of Cheryl Crane-Hunter’s work: not just to show beauty, but to remind us where to find it.