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  • Personal Folklore: Ray Hwang on Painting What You Can't Forget
    Mar 24 2026

    How do contemporary artists turn memory into meaning?

    In this episode of La Collector, host Mackenzie Heard interviews painter Ray Hwang about his creative process, artistic influences, and the role of personal history in contemporary painting. Based in New York, Hwang’s work blends abstraction with symbolic imagery—drawing from his upbringing, cultural identity, and everyday observations.

    This conversation explores:

    • The creative process behind abstract painting
    • How artists develop visual language and symbolism
    • The role of identity and memory in art
    • Materials like joss paper and their cultural significance
    • Tips for how to look at and understand contemporary art

    Whether you’re new to the art world or a seasoned collector looking for their new favorite artist, this episode offers a deeper look into how artists think—and how you can engage with their work more confidently.


    Follow Ray -- @rayhwangart or www.rayhwangart.com

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    34 Min.
  • What Nobody Told You About Art History — And Why It Actually Matters
    Mar 9 2026

    Art history was never meant to be a list of names and dates you were supposed to memorize in tenth grade. It was always something messier, more human, and far more interesting than that.

    In this episode, Mackenzie breaks down the major art movements — Neoclassicism, Impressionism, Modernism, Abstract Expressionism, Postmodernism, and Contemporary art — not as a timeline, but as a chain reaction. Because every single movement started the same way: with artists who looked at what existed and decided it wasn't enough anymore.

    You'll learn why critics accidentally named Impressionism with an insult, what Picasso was actually rebelling against, why Abstract Expressionism made New York the art capital of the world, and how Warhol used consumer culture to blow up everything that came before him.

    By the end, you won't just recognize these terms — you'll understand what they were fighting for. And the next time someone at a gallery says "this feels very postmodern," you'll know exactly what they mean.

    This is not Art History 101. No lectures. No slides. Just the story of people who refused to repeat what came before them — and changed everything because of it.

    Subscribe to La Collector wherever you listen, and follow along on Instagram (@lacollector.podcast) for gallery picks, cultural commentary, and art world insider access.

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    11 Min.
  • The Insider’s NYC Art Guide
    Mar 1 2026

    If you’ve only been to The Whitney, we need to talk.

    This week, I’m sitting down with Michelle, the woman behind What’s Up in NY (@whats_up_in_ny) who's mapping the best art, talks, and cultural moments happening across New York City. We talk about:

    • The best free and pay-what-you-wish museums in NYC
    • The small galleries in Tribeca, Chinatown, and the Lower East Side you shouldn’t sleep on
    • Why some of the most important shows aren’t the most hyped
    • How to build your own taste (instead of chasing trends)
    • What it really means to “get” art


    Whether you live in New York or you’re visiting for the weekend, this is your insider’s guide to navigating the NYC art scene with confidence. Because art isn’t about knowing everything. It’s about knowing what moves you.

    Come for the hidden gems. Stay for the permission to trust your own eye.


    And make sure you follow What's Up in NY | Substack (⁠⁠@whatsupinnythisweek), Instagram: @whats_up_in_ny

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    35 Min.
  • Art Discovery with Morgan Everhart, Founder of ArtHap
    Feb 18 2026

    We’re talking art discovery—NYC edition—with Morgan Everhart, artist and founder of ArtHap, the beloved New York listings platform that helped thousands of people figure out what openings were actually worth leaving the apartment for and is now part of ArtRabbit, a global art discovery platform.

    In this episode, Mackenzie sits down with Morgan to unpack what’s really happening behind the curtain of the art world: how galleries function, why pricing is still so murky for artists and buyers, and what it takes to build a truly useful discovery tool in a city where everything opens on Thursday and somehow all at once. We also get into the big shift happening right now—our changing relationship to the internet, niche communities, and the tension between fragmentation and connection in the art scene.

    Morgan shares what he’s learned from years of navigating every layer of the ecosystem (from museum jobs to studio management to platform-building), why it’s okay if you don’t like the work, and what parts of experiencing art will always be deeply human—no matter how digital the world gets.

    If you’ve ever felt intimidated walking into a gallery, overwhelmed by the noise, or stuck scrolling without a plan — this is your roadmap.

    Follow ArtRabbit (⁠⁠www.artrabbit.com⁠⁠⁠) | Instagram: @artrabbit

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    35 Min.
  • Art as Necessary Expression
    Feb 9 2026

    In this episode, Mackenzie explores art as a necessary form of expression during moments of crisis, division, and uncertainty. We talk about how artists use their work to document lived experience, preserve memory, and speak when language — or institutions — fail. From historical examples to contemporary artists working right now, this episode looks at how art often becomes the first draft of history.

    This isn’t about taking sides or decoding art “correctly.” It’s about understanding why art so often emerges in moments of rupture, why discomfort is sometimes the point, and how looking closely can be an active, human response to the world we’re living in.

    This is a slower, more reflective episode about art not as decoration or status, but as orientation — a way to make sense of what’s happening around us and feel a little less alone while we do.

    Because art doesn’t just reflect the world. It responds to it.


    Resources & References

    • Francisco Goya (c. 1810–1820)

    • Jacob Lawrence (1940–1941)

    • Kara Walker (1990s–present)

    • Dread Scott (1980s–present)

    • ACT UP (late 1980s–1990s)

    • Theaster Gates (2000s–present)

    • Zanele Muholi (2000s–present)

    • Forensic Architecture (2010–present)

    • Banksy (1990s–present)

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    15 Min.
  • Inside Sotheby’s & the Art of Collecting with Gigi Dick
    Feb 3 2026

    In this episode of La Collector, Mackenzie sits down with Gigi Dick to talk about what actually keeps us connected to art long after the opening night buzz fades.

    With a background in art history and experience spanning Sotheby's, art advisory, and now the design world as a buyer at Williams-Sonoma’s GreenRow, Gigi has seen the art world from nearly every angle. She pulls back the curtain on the psychology of collecting, the quiet power of discretion inside auction houses, and why memory and emotion often matter more than price tags.

    We talk about what really happens behind the scenes at Sotheby’s, from client strategy to the social choreography of auctions, and the difference between collecting for status and collecting for yourself. Gigi shares how art advisors shape collections in subtle but powerful ways, why buying art should be intuitive and personal, and where to begin if you’re new to the art world and feeling intimidated.

    This episode is a reminder that collecting isn’t about having the “right” taste. It’s about paying attention, staying curious, and letting art become part of your everyday life. Whether you’re wandering museums, saving artists on Instagram, or filling your walls with pieces tied to memories, this conversation will change how you think about living with art.


    Resources & References

    • Legion of Honor

    • de Young Museum

    • San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA)

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    24 Min.
  • Curating Art for the World’s Chicest Hotels
    Jan 26 2026

    We talk about art as objects all the time. But what happens when art becomes environment?

    Luxury hotels are one of the few places where art has to work instantly, at scale, and for thousands of people a day — most of whom aren’t consciously thinking about the art at all. And yet, it shapes how we move, how we feel, and how we experience a space.

    In this episode, I’m pulling back the curtain on how art actually gets curated for luxury hospitality. From creative briefs and brand psychology to scale, framing, budgets, and the realities no one posts about, this is an honest look at what goes into building spaces that feel intentional, elevated, and alive.

    I share how I moved from a corporate job that wasn’t quite right into the world of art advisory, and what working on projects like luxury hotels taught me about taste, restraint, and storytelling — lessons that apply far beyond five-star lobbies.

    This conversation is about understanding how art works when it’s meant to be lived with, not just looked at. And most importantly, how you can apply the same principles to your own space — no hotel budget required.

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    20 Min.
  • Where to Buy Affordable Art That Doesn’t Suck
    Jan 19 2026

    If you’ve ever loved a piece of art until you saw the price, you’re not alone. This is the question I get asked more than any other, and it’s the one that stops so many people from collecting before they even begin.

    In this episode, we’re talking honestly about where to buy affordable art that actually feels good to live with. Real work by real artists. The truth is, affordable art exists, but finding it takes a little curiosity and a shift in how you think about collecting.

    I break this conversation into two parts. First, the how. How to approach buying art on a normal budget without crashing out, rushing, or chasing trends. We talk about building taste, trusting your eye, and why emotional connection matters more than size or price. Then, the where. The categories of places where great, buyable art actually lives, from open studios and artist-run spaces to student shows, print shops, small art fairs, and curated online platforms.

    This episode is about slowing down, looking more closely, and realizing you do not need permission to collect. You do not need connections. And you definitely do not need a comma in your bank account to have taste.

    Resources that are mentioned in this episode are below, and my curated NYC Art Gallery Map is linked for anyone looking to start exploring in person.


    Resources & References

    Open Studios

    • Bushwick Open Studios

    • Greenpoint Open Studios

    • Frogtown Art Walk

    Artist-Run and Project Spaces

    • Tiger Strikes Asteroid

    • SOHO20 Gallery

    • Human Resources

    Art Fairs

    • The Other Art Fair

    • Superfine Art Fair

    • Future Fair

    Print Shops and Edition Studios

    • Lower East Side Printshop

    • Tamarind Institute

    • Chicago Printmakers Collective

    Online Platforms

    • Tappan Collective

    • Uprise Art

    • Artsper

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    15 Min.