The Transmute Tapes by Maison Douce

Maison Douce

Welcome to "The Transmute Tapes," a podcast by Maison Douce, an art collective from Germany led by Lotte Hauss and Marc Thaddaeus Suess. The Transmute Tapes bring you insightful commentary on contemporary art, immersive performances, and exclusive interviews with visionary artists and creatives worldwide. Each episode delves into a unique story, inspiration, or the creative process of our guests, offering a global perspective on modern artistic practices. As an art collective, we aim to reconnect with the primal forces of ancient rituals, myths, and symbols. We believe in the enduring significance of these expressions of the collective subconscious, that we find in stories, sacred places, and folk traditions. Discover inspiring talks, audio documentaries or art performances. Subscribe now on your favorite podcast platform and visit our website at [maison-douce.com](http://maison-douce.com) for more information and artworks.

Episodes

  1. The Mystery of the Siberian Ice Maiden: Kim Trainor on Poetry, Death, and Memory

    Apr 10

    The Mystery of the Siberian Ice Maiden: Kim Trainor on Poetry, Death, and Memory

    For this episode of The Transmute Tapes, we speak with Kim Trainor — a Canadian poet, teacher, and author based in Vancouver, whose work moves between poetry, ecology, memory, grief, and the ethics of attention. We first connected with Kim through a shared fascination with the Siberian Ice Maiden — the tattooed Iron Age woman unearthed from the frozen Pazyryk burial grounds in Siberia. In Kim Trainor’s book "Ledi", this discovery becomes a poetic investigation shaped by archaeology, intimacy, memory, grief, and the strange persistence with which the dead continue to address the living. For Maison Douce, the Siberian Ice Maiden became the starting point for a different artistic gesture: the flag "Talking to Ghosts", conceived as a portal and trigger — an artwork that invites confession, projection, and the release of buried knowledge. In this conversation, we explore where these approaches meet: how one ancient figure can move across time and enter the present through radically different artistic forms, awakening both poetic language and visual ritual. In this episode, we talk about what it means to be seized by a presence from the distant past, and what allows an unearthed body, image, or fragment of story to still act upon us across centuries. We discuss the ethics of unearthing the past, the responsibilities that come with working artistically with the dead, and the fragile line between revelation and appropriation. Kim also reflects on her writing process, poetry as a form of listening, and her deep connection to the natural world. We touch on her most recent book, Blue thinks itself within me: Lyric poetry, ecology, and lichenous form, and on the way ecology, weather, plant life, and environmental crisis enter her work. This is a conversation about artistic kinship, ancient remains, poetic form, ritual, and the mysterious ways certain figures keep calling to us. **Content note: This episode includes references to death and suicide. Please skip this episode if you prefer not to engage with these themes.**

    1h 13m
  2. Art Is Magick: Pam Grossman Interview

    Feb 6

    Art Is Magick: Pam Grossman Interview

    In this episode of The Transmute Tapes, we speak with Pam Grossman — writer, curator, and host of the podcast The Witch Wave — about witchcraft, art, ritual, and the quiet forces shaping creative life today. Our conversation begins with fairy tales, winter thresholds, and first encounters with witches, and moves into questions of how magic is learned, practiced, inherited, and performed. We talk about everyday, quiet forms of witchcraft and moments when magic must become visible: staged, shared, or even confrontational. From German folk traditions around Frau Holle and Perchta to contemporary ritual performance, we explore the thin line between theatre and belief, care and danger, nourishment and threat. We speak about ancestral memory, historical violence, and the long shadow of the witch trials, including personal journeys into family history and sites of persecution. With Pam, we discuss creativity as a sacred practice: rituals that sustain artistic work, the role of intuition and discipline, and the ways artists across history have worked with unseen influences. We reflect on what makes an artwork feel alive, whether magic is embedded in the object or activated through encounter, and if art has ever truly been separate from ritual or spiritual practice. This episode is not about nostalgia or aesthetics, but about presence, responsibility, and attention, about what happens when art, magic, and culture meet without clear boundaries. A conversation about witches, creativity, ancestry, and the forces we carry – knowingly or not.

    1h 23m
  3. Elena Unger (Artist) Interview

    09/26/2025

    Elena Unger (Artist) Interview

    Elena Unger calls herself a painter of the apocalypse—not as spectacle, but as a lens for truth. A painter and installation artist, she works across sculpture, sound, film, and site-specific formats, building what she calls “extra-liturgical” spaces where her apocalyptic imagery can breathe. In our conversation we explore why collapse and revelation keep returning in her practice, how images arrive fully formed like waking dreams, and what it means for art to act as witness, archivist, and ritual all at once. We talk about the moment an image lands and the small rituals she uses to catch it before it fades; why “the end” isn’t an aesthetic but a way to sharpen attention, ethics, and even a stubborn kind of hope; and how Paul Klee’s painting Angelus Novus, refracted through Walter Benjamin’s Angel of History, becomes a working philosophy in her studio—testimony to the fragments progress leaves behind. We move through historic craft and sacred sujets made urgent in the present tense, then trace the braid of her training at Central Saint Martins, Goldsmiths, and in Philosophical Theology at Cambridge, and how those languages meet in practice. From there, the conversation turns to art and the sacred: when an exhibition becomes ritual, how communal attention might be rebuilt in a culture designed to splinter it, and why devotion sometimes looks like miniature painting—editing the infinite, deciding what not to render, drawing the line between revelation and noise. Find Transmute Tapes on your podcast app of choice. If the episode resonates, please follow, rate, and share—it helps new listeners discover the show.

    1h 22m

About

Welcome to "The Transmute Tapes," a podcast by Maison Douce, an art collective from Germany led by Lotte Hauss and Marc Thaddaeus Suess. The Transmute Tapes bring you insightful commentary on contemporary art, immersive performances, and exclusive interviews with visionary artists and creatives worldwide. Each episode delves into a unique story, inspiration, or the creative process of our guests, offering a global perspective on modern artistic practices. As an art collective, we aim to reconnect with the primal forces of ancient rituals, myths, and symbols. We believe in the enduring significance of these expressions of the collective subconscious, that we find in stories, sacred places, and folk traditions. Discover inspiring talks, audio documentaries or art performances. Subscribe now on your favorite podcast platform and visit our website at [maison-douce.com](http://maison-douce.com) for more information and artworks.