『The Russi Hive』のカバーアート

The Russi Hive

The Russi Hive

著者: Alejandra Russi
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The Russi Hive is a podcast about creativity—unfolding in conversations with expected and unexpected people; not only artists, but anyone with a practice, a system, or an obsession that shapes how they think and live.

Presented by Ricco/Maresca and hosted by Alejandra Russi, The Russi Hive is filmed and recorded in the gallery’s New York City space. This show is a place for those drawn to the unseen mechanics of making, the inner weather reports, invented languages, and the way an idea arrives at the "wrong" time and still changes everything.

© 2026 The Russi Hive
アート 社会科学
エピソード
  • Alejandro Triana: Dude with the Oud — Passion, Place, and Playing Between the Notes
    2026/07/09

    In Episode 10 of The Russi Hive Podcast, Alejandra sits down with Alejandro Triana—her nephew, almost-sibling, and the musician behind Dude with the Oud—for a conversation about obsession as creative fuel, the worlds we build as children, and the strange, crooked routes by which a life begins to sound like itself.

    The episode opens with family lore: two Alejandros, a Disney autograph book, a missing set of Ninja Turtle pages, and a childhood "crime" that somehow becomes a theory of creative temperament. For Triana, obsession was never casual. As a child, it meant entering a world completely; as an artist, it becomes a way of listening, practicing, and following a sound until it changes the shape of your life.

    At the center of the conversation is the oud: the ancient, fretless, microtonal instrument Triana calls the grandfather of guitars. After hearing it in a Lower East Side club, he bought one the next day and began chasing a sound that would lead him through Arabic music, flamenco, Andalusian histories, diasporic identity, and a musical language of his own.

    They talk about skateboarding through New York as a kid, subway musicians as early influences, the tension between practice and play, and the challenge of making music in an era that asks artists to become content creators.

    The episode also circles back to childhood world-building: toys with names, elaborate plots, vanished little universes, and the creative muscle that forms before anyone knows to call it art. What emerges is a conversation about self-invention, discipline, detours, and living on your own timeline.

    Original music and sonic identity by Antfood.

    Sound design: Federico Casazza.

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    48 分
  • Choghakate Kazarian: Unquicken the Pace — Curating as Medium and Letting Ideas Ripen
    2026/06/25

    In Episode 9 of The Russi Hive Podcast, Alejandra sits down with Choghakate Kazarian—art historian, curator, and writer—to talk about curating as a creative medium.

    Kazarian’s story begins in several languages at once: Armenian, French, English, Italian—each one carrying its own atmosphere, its own way of thinking, its own private weather. Born in Armenia, raised in France, and shaped by years of looking across cultures, she speaks about language not as translation, but as a way of seeing.

    From there, they move into the hidden architecture of exhibition-making: the research, the rhythm, the negotiations with space and loans, and the quiet labor that allows a show to feel inevitable. For Kazarian, the curator’s hand should guide without announcing itself; when an exhibition works, the machinery recedes, and the artist comes more fully into view.

    They discuss Lucio Fontana, Henry Darger, Louis Michel Eilshemius, the slippery usefulness of labels like outsider art and Art Brut, and Kazarian’s unexpected turn into fashion with her Chloé exhibition at the Jewish Museum. Darger becomes a turning point: after years shaped by Duchamp and other modernist touchstones, Kazarian describes encountering his work as a before-and-after experience—one that unsettled her categories and opened a different way of seeing artistic intensity and necessity.

    The episode closes with a meditation on time: how ideas ripen, how exhibitions continue after they close, and why slowness can be a form of resistance in a culture obsessed with productivity. Through the work of Albert Pinkham Ryder, Kazarian reflects on revision, unfinishedness, and the delicate discipline of bringing a work to closure without pretending it is ever truly complete.

    Original music and sonic identity by Antfood.

    Sound design: Federico Casazza.

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    49 分
  • Scott Asen: The Enemy Is Boredom — Taste, Risk, and Turtle Bay Records
    2026/06/11

    In Episode 8 of The Russi Hive, Alejandra sits down with Scott Asen: founder of Turtle Bay Records, investor, raconteur, and proof that a life can be organized around taste, mischief, and a highly productive fear of boredom.

    The interview traces the unlikely arc of a man who grew up with show business in his bloodstream—his mother in vaudeville, his father a clarinet and saxophone player—and then somehow threaded his way through Groton, Harvard, Wall Street, a Cambridge piano bar, private investing, and several lives’ worth of detours.

    At the center of the episode is Turtle Bay Records, the jazz label Asen founded during the stillness of 2020. What started as a way to record extraordinary musicians playing older jazz has become a larger ecosystem of albums, parties, friendships, music videos, late-night performances, and an elegant excuse to keep very good people in the same room.

    They talk about the strange usefulness of not fitting in, old New York, and Asen’s Manhattan townhouse, affectionately known in younger circles as the “Jazz Mansion.” The result is a conversation about music, timing, nerve, and the fine art of turning an address into a scene.

    Original music and sonic identity by Antfood.

    Sound design: Federico Casazza.

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    46 分
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