We’re stepping out of New York and into Austin—where the energy is hot, the tacos are good, and the art scene is quickly becoming impossible to ignore.
In this episode, Mackenzie sits down with Austin-based abstract painter Hunter Ash, whose richly layered works feel intuitive, vulnerable, and deeply human. Her paintings aren’t about perfection—they’re about movement. The kind of feeling you recognize before you can name it.
We talk about what it actually looks like to build an art career outside the traditional art capitals, why Austin’s creative community is having a moment, and how Hunter found her voice after taking an unexpected path into the art world. We get into studio routines, creative blocks, and the hardest part of painting: knowing when to stop. Plus: why hating the work might be part of the process, and what it means to make art people genuinely want to live with.
This conversation feels like a deep exhale—honest, grounded, and full of reminders that art doesn’t have to be a shout to be powerful.
Follow Hunter Ash (www.hunterash.com) | Instagram: @hunterash.art
Resources & References
Artists Mentioned in the Episode:
Winter Ruski, Paintings (2000s–present)
Heather Day, Abstract Paintings (2010s–present)
Emily Eisenhart, Paintings (2010s–present)