Creative Process Is Gardening

conceptual-metaphor HorticultureCreative Process

Categories: systems-thinkingarts-and-culture

What It Brings

The gardener does not make the garden. The gardener creates conditions under which a garden happens. Seeds are planted with intent, but the garden’s actual form emerges from an interaction between plan, soil, weather, and accident. The gardener’s deepest skill is knowing when to intervene and when to wait.

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Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Brian Eno articulated this most clearly in his 1996 talk “Gardening vs. Architecture” (later developed in various interviews and his diary A Year with Swollen Appendices). His argument: the dominant metaphor for creative work is architecture: you have a plan, you execute the plan, you’re done. But his actual practice is gardening: you set up conditions (a generative music system, a set of Oblique Strategies cards, a studio configuration) and then you tend what emerges.

The insight has roots in Japanese garden aesthetics (controlled wildness), permaculture design (working with natural systems rather than against them), and complexity theory (emergence from simple rules). Eno gave it legs in Western creative practice by connecting it to specific working methods.

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