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The Russi Hive

The Russi Hive

By: 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
Art Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Scott Asen: The Enemy Is Boredom — Taste, Risk, and Turtle Bay Records
    Jun 11 2026

    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 mins
  • Laetitia Barbier: Pocketable Museum — Tarot as Creative Language and Mirror
    May 28 2026

    In Episode 7 of The Russi Hive Podcast, Alejandra sits down with Laetitia Barbier—tarot reader, writer, art historian, and longtime explorer of the strange, sacred life of images—to talk about tarot not as fortune-telling, but as a creative language.

    The conversation begins with Barbier’s childhood in France and her encounter with her first deck in a tobacconist’s shop. From there, they explore Barbier’s lifelong relationship to images—their power to instruct and enchant—with museums as surrogate churches and the tarot deck as a “pocketable museum”: a portable world of symbols and archetypes that keep rearranging themselves into new meaning.

    The core of the episode is tarot as a poetic practice. Barbier speaks about readings as intimate, collaborative encounters, where images are gathered into a kind of secret theater—opening space for reflection, vulnerability, and self-knowledge.

    They discuss New York’s countercultural lineages, the resurgence of tarot in a cynical age, and why people may be turning again toward ritual and symbolic depth. The episode closes by turning the cards toward creativity itself, moving from the Fool’s raw potential to the Star’s quiet clarity, with failure and transformation as part of the path.

    Original music and sonic identity by Antfood.

    Sound design: Federico Casazza.

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    53 mins
  • Elizabeth Dee: Who Gets Seen — Attention, Power, and Building Independent
    May 14 2026

    In this episode of The Russi Hive, Alejandra sits down with Elizabeth Dee, founder of the Independent Art Fairs, to talk about what it means to build the kinds of platforms the art world doesn’t yet know it needs. The conversation begins with Dee’s early years at Deitch Projects and the founding of Elizabeth Dee Gallery, then moves through formative exhibitions with artists such as Adrian Piper and Ryan Trecartin; the broader New York generation that emerged around shows like Greater New York at PS1/MoMA; and the delicate question of how to honor artists’ histories while helping their work find the right present-day context, audience, and future.

    They dig into the origins of Independent: how a handful of conversations among like-minded dealers became a different kind of New York art fair, designed for slower, more intentional looking and often centered on tightly curated, narrative-driven presentations. Elizabeth traces how the project has since grown into a larger architecture—one that includes editorial publishing, research initiatives, and an invite-only press bureau. She talks about stewardship in practice: commissioning English-language scholarship for artists from Latin America and other underrepresented contexts; using the fair’s platform to encourage collectors to look beyond a narrow “I only buy contemporary” mindset; and treating press and criticism as part of the historical record, not merely a PR afterthought.

    Along the way, Elizabeth speaks candidly about what it meant to build a gallery, close one, and reinvent herself through Independent—and how those experiences reshaped her thinking around risk, responsibility, and visibility. She describes the fair and its related projects as an “architecture” for showing work, where exhibition formats, commissioned texts, and press coverage all have to align. Again and again, the conversation returns to a central question: how to use that structure to give artists from different places and generations meaningful visibility, without reducing their work to another short-lived market story.

    Original music and sonic identity by Antfood.

    Sound design: Federico Casazza.

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    46 mins
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