Two Nonprofit Salaries, One Extraordinary Collection - with Stephen Mills & Brent Hasty
Today, we are pulling back the curtain on what it actually means to live with, fund, and deeply connect with contemporary art, completely stripping away the usual intimidation and gallery gatekeeping.
My guests today are Stephen Mills and Brent Hasty. Stephen is the visionary artistic director and choreographer at Ballet Austin, constantly navigating the delicate tug-of-war between traditional funding and progressive programming. Brent holds a PhD in curriculum studies and is the driving force behind MINDPOP, a brilliant nonprofit dedicated to expanding creative learning and ensuring kids in public schools have true, systemic access to the arts.
Together for nearly thirty years, they have built an incredible, deeply personal collection. Walking through their home means encountering profound, history-hacking works by legendary artists like Kehinde Wiley, Wolfgang Tillmans, Louis Fratino, and Andres Serrano. But for Stephen and Brent, this has never been about trophy hunting or status symbols. It is an extension of their daily work—living with immediate, powerful conversations about identity, representation, and the radical beauty of ordinary, intimate human experiences.
In this episode, we meander through their journey from the very beginning, starting with a single, small painting carefully packed into a suitcase during an early trip to Paris. They share how they have resourcefully grown their collection over the years within the boundaries of two nonprofit salaries, relying on intuition and investing in artists early in their careers. We also dive deep into the philosophy of how art actively transforms us—exploring the idea that while a canvas remains static, we are the variables that grow and evolve every time we pass it. Finally, Brent unpacks the work of educational theorist Elliot Eisner, proving that art isn’t just a pleasant emotional outlet, but a vital cognitive tool that trains the brain to process information, think metaphorically, and solve real-world problems.
This is a warm, expansive conversation about curiosity, partnership, and the quiet power of living with art. Here is my conversation with Stephen and Brent.
Episode recorded June 13, 2026
Timelines and chapters
* 01:40 — Episode Introduction
* 03:57 — An Institutional Summer: The Venice Biennale & Controversies
* 05:30 — Separating Art from Commerce: The Non-Market Powerhouses
* 06:57 — Patronage on the Move: Ballet Austin Takes Donors to Paris
* 09:15 — Stuffed in a Suitcase: The First Acquisition in Paris
* 10:28 — Demystifying the White Cube: Overcoming Gallery Intimidation
* 11:09 — Passive Activism: Shifting from Status Symbols to Artist Support
* 13:09 — Institutional Responsibility: Prioritizing LGBTQ and Queer Representation
* 15:02 — Living with Static Objects: Why the Viewer is the True Variable
* 19:43 — Spatial Dialogues: Forcing Artworks into Conversation
* 20:23 — Curators, Community, and the Reality of Art World Gossip
* 23:29 — Two Minds, One House: The Consensus Rules of Couple Collecting
* 25:58 — The Early Track Record: Collecting Artists Straight Out of School
* 26:54 — Starting Small: Democratizing the Ecosystem with Prints and Books
* 28:30 — The Vogel Method: Strategic Collecting on Two Nonprofit Salaries
* 30:36 — The Sigmar Polke Trap: Early Mistakes and Resisting Dealer Pressure
* 32:36 — Cracks in the System: Navigating Global Economic Duress in the Arts
* 37:28 — MINDPOP & Elliot Eisner: The Cognitive Impact of Creative Systems
* 40:19 — Creative Problem Solving: Using Metaphor to Think Scientifically
* 41:25 — The Generative Limit: Why AI Can’t Simulate a Creative Future
* 44:41 — The Irreplaceable Body: Human Emotion vs. Machine Choreography
* 49:01 — Success Through Failure: Advice for the Next Generation of Creatives
* 52:28 — Outro