Conrad was patient, Kathryn says, even as she asked him nonstop questions. It was in these moments that she decided she would pursue art for a living.
“He shared the same level of appreciation and reverence for this place. It was very powerful to think you can use art to write a love letter. And that’s when I really, really decided that’s exactly what I was going to do.”
Kathryn left Wyoming to study, first at the University of Notre Dame, where she spent an influential semester in Rome, and then at the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design in Washington, D.C. She also holds a master’s degree from the University of Virginia. While grateful for her education and experience outside of Jackson, when she was away, she felt perpetually homesick.
“I felt like a displaced person,” she says. “I called it my curse. I couldn’t find anywhere else that matched the beauty here, so I felt like I wasn’t going to be happy anywhere else.”
In 2005, Kathryn and two other artists opened Trio Fine Art in Jackson. Eventually, the other two owners dropped out and the gallery evolved into Turner Fine Art. Still located in downtown Jackson, the gallery features other landscape and wildlife artists who share her love for the natural world.
For as much time as she dedicates to art, Kathryn also makes time to get outside. As someone who has watched Jackson evolve over the decades, the recent explosion of growth has her concerned for the animals she holds dear. With an increasing number of summer visitors and bumper-to-bumper traffic, migration routes get cut. And with a record number of bears euthanized due to conflicts with humans — because of unsecured trash cans or people trying to feed them — she wonders if most people realize the impact they have on the area.
“I would argue that everyone who moves here is moving here for the natural world,” she says. “So let’s not ruin it then.”
But with change comes opportunity, and she hopes that those moving to Jackson become involved in conservation efforts.
“We learn from the natural world. I think that’s a really important principle, to make sure we are humble enough — to make sure we are learning from Mother Nature.”