The Creative
Resistance

Not a style. Not an aesthetic. Not a manifesto.

A set of decisions people make to keep work unmistakably their own — when the culture wants it faster, bigger, and frictionless.

Across 65 practitioners and 20 disciplines, the same six decisions keep appearing. Where they draw from. Who they need. What distance gives them. What they refuse. What they repeat. What happened before the work began.

A baker and an architect share five of them.

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Pick two names

Process

Six ways of making. A baker and an architect share the same instinct. A musician and a fashion designer impose the same constraint. Discipline doesn't predict method. Tap a card. Reload for new faces.

(Re)Sources

The past isn't nostalgia. It's raw material. The archive, the technique, the biography, the commitment — four ways of using what already exists.

The Literal Archive
Finding physical objects and documents. The answer is in a basement, a drawer, behind a wall.
Order / Jesse Reed
Found the NYCTA manual in Pentagram's basement while looking for a tarp. Herman Miller's archive in Zeeland — Eames letters, Girard textiles. Freed the M from its circle. Single typeface proposal: Söhne. "The key component is not great typography — it's trust."
Brian Collins / COLLINS
Goes to the Letterform Archive. Went back to original 1950s hand-drawings of Neue Haas Grotesk for the Freeform project. "How far can you push it before it snaps?"
Wales Bonner
"The library I am building is what I am plugging into as an artist." Hired full-time researchers. Thousands of images to arrive at a hundred. Lovers Rock: a year and a half of research across three seasons
Formafantasma
Tracked a discarded phone from a European bin to a dump in Ghana. Mapped the timber industry from forest to showroom. Two years of investigation before drawing anything. The objects are arguments, not products.
Brûlé / Monocle
Built a magazine by travelling to the places, meeting the people, documenting what's already there. Physical retail, radio, cafes — the archive is the world itself, walked through and recorded.
Cecily Brown
A magpie. Copies Hogarth, Snyders, Munch, Fragonard, Manet. "I don't really know a work of art til I've copied it." Rubbishy printouts, phone screenshots, reversed Old Masters. The copy IS the method of knowing.
Jonathan Anderson
Mind-maps. Cinema, fine art, TikTok memes, kitsch, ceramics — everything fed into the work. Collects Arts and Crafts. Curates exhibitions. Brings craftspeople into the fashion system. The archive isn't referenced — it's installed.
Torrisi & Carbone / Major Food Group
The former Rocco space became Carbone — neon sign over the original, honoring the history. Carbone: "It always starts with a story. You tell it to designers, architects, craftsmen making your plates." Parkside in Ozone Park was his Carbone before he had a Carbone.
Sophie Calle
Hotel rooms, address books, wastebaskets. Took a job as a hotel maid in Venice — camera and tape recorder hidden in her mop bucket. Three weeks of inventorying strangers' closets. Everything was true. Except one room, which was completely fake.
Gerhard Richter
The photograph prevents the painter from imposing style. Without it you do it in the wrong way, is stylish way or deformed. The small photos — cheap dirty banal — painted in oil, they come to the museum and many people look at them for years. The photographs of the family left behind in East Germany became the first paintings.
The Inherited Technique
Craft knowledge passed through hands, body to body. Skills that predate the maker by centuries.
Visvim / Nakamura
Moccasins from the Sami people. Navajo blankets. Edo-period kimonos. Vegetable tanning, not chrome. Mud-dyed Amami Oshima. 22 years asking: what's underneath the surface?
Tartine / Robertson
6-year grain breeding project with Washington State. Stone mill and roller mill on the same line — "put together the wrong way on purpose." Backyard wood-fired oven at 3am.
Lemaire
"The unsung heroes of workwear and military wear. The unknown pattern cutters who worked at Levi's. That's real design." Who designed the first trench coat?
Kéré
Clay pots stacked as ceiling ventilation — air rises through them and escapes under a raised roof. No air conditioning. The building breathes. Laterite pressed into bricks, dried in the sun. Rebar bent by hand.
Vo Trong Nghia
Bamboo as ancient Vietnamese building material. 1,000 days of meditation in Myanmar — an inherited practice applied to architecture.
Thom Browne
Savile Row tailoring techniques applied to proportions nobody asked for. The tradition is the foundation he warps.
Molly Dineen
Herb de Joia laughed at her shooting script in front of the class. Wiseman, Pennebaker, the Maysles — observational cinema. Made Sound Business at London College of Printing, filming a Brixton sound system during the 1981 riots.
Aktar Islam
A royal Indian cookbook from the Mughal courts changed everything — he saw that chefs had been shaping the evolution of Indian cuisine for centuries. Made a conscious decision to shape the next evolution from a kitchen in Birmingham.
Sou Fujimoto
The only architect he knew was Gaudí. Then Le Corbusier and Mies van der Rohe: they created not just shapes but lifestyles. The Hokkaido forest and the Tokyo street — both made of small elements at human scale. Those two childhood memories became the twin engines.
Peter Zumthor
Aunt's door handle. The memory of touching it as a child — the temperature of the brass, the weight, the sound of the latch. 20-year buildings designed for body memory. "Atmospheres" as inherited sensory knowledge.
George Saunders
A Swim in a Pond in the Rain: Chekhov, Tolstoy, Gogol taken apart sentence by sentence. What does this line do? Why is it here? What would happen if you cut it? The inherited technique, passed from the Russians to his students through his own reading.
Luc Tuymans
Van Eyck is the most powerful painter in the western hemisphere. His motto Als Ich Kan — if I can — means: very humble, but behind the humility, gigantic ambition. Fritz Lang never showed violence — the balloon pops, you know the kid dies. After van Eyck, we\'re all dilettantes.
Simone Bodmer-Turner
Oaxaca — coiling traditions in Atzompa. Japan — wood kilns. West African depression molds carved into the ground, a huge lump of clay shaped with a mallet, thinning it out in the curve of the earth. That is the method that mesmerises her. Communities with less industrialised clay traditions.
The Personal Past
Their own biography as source material. The childhood, the loss, the first encounter — mined and remade.
Es Devlin
Can't use the software herself. Team prints it off, she sketches over it. Keeps pieces of old models around as reference — threading back to earlier trains of thought. "The text is in charge and the design should serve the text."
The Row
Child stardom, Dualstar, $1.2B in licensing — the archive they design against. The Row is the anti-Full House: durable, silent, authorless.
Phoebe Philo
"One continuous collection." Her own work at Chloé and Céline IS the source material. The eponymous label is the archive made personal.
Tyler, the Creator
Don't Tap the Glass — a joyful journey through a half-century of Black dance music, written backstage on tour. The archive is the resource. Heard chords as weather at age 7 before he had words for them.
Ghotmeh
Mother's architecture diploma during the Lebanese civil war. Bombing outside the exam room. Stone Garden is archaeology of the future built from personal history.
Jonathan Anderson
Grandfather was a textile designer. Northern Ireland textile heritage runs through Loewe and Dior. The Troubles as biographical material.
Marina Abramović
Both parents were Partisan national heroes. Father survived the Igman March — one night, minus twenty-five degrees, two hundred survivors. Left Yugoslavia on a three-week visa. Restriction was the material. Freedom required her to reinvent it.
Kojima
Parents' nightly film-watching ritual — not allowed to bed until the movie finished. That ritual became a lifetime of obsessive cultural consumption. Books, films, music all become source material. The Creative Gene maps every influence back to his own biography.
David Fincher
Father Jack was a journalist who fell in love with movies and gifted that love. Wrote the screenplay for Mank. Died 2003, eighth draft. The script sat on a shelf for 17 years. On Fincher\'s desk: a black-and-white photograph of Jack, eyes closed, taken at age 14. That\'s why it\'s out of focus.
The Long Commitment
Staying with one thing until it becomes an archive of itself. Time as material.
Are.na / Broskoski
Named the company "When It Changed" (William Gibson). Aspires to become a 1,300-year-old Japanese hot spring hotel. 15 years building one tool.
Nendo / Sato
Shikinen Sengu: Ise Grand Shrine rebuilt every 20 years. No blueprints — only techniques passed down. "Not passing down things, but techniques."
Loose Joints
Found Robin Graubard — a photojournalist in her 70s who covered the fall of communism across Yugoslavia. Never published a book. Sarah spotted photos online and reached out. Sophie Green's Congregation: two years from first edit to publication.
Moniker
Conditional Design manifesto (2000s) → Designing Friction statement (2020s). Same question, refined over 15 years. The manifestos are the archive.
Satisfy / Partouche
Running is the oldest human movement. The brand's entire archive is the daily run — repeated thousands of times, never the same.
Brûlé / Monocle
20+ years building one editorial world. Magazine, radio, retail, cafes — the same vision extended into every medium. The commitment IS the brand.
Da Corte
CD cases as palettes. Reverse-glass painting from sign-making. Disney villains as queer icons. Frank Film — a life told through thousands of cut-out images.
Richard Prince
Rephotographed Marlboro cowboys. Collects first editions 1949-1984. Neal Cassady's On the Road. A CIA-annotated joke book. The collection might be his best work.
Snøhetta
Won the Library of Alexandria. Invited friends to sit at desks pretending to be architects. During the Arab Spring, people held hands around the building to protect it.
Molly Dineen
Made Sound Business at London College of Printing — obsessively filming a Brixton sound system during the 1981 riots. Then Herb de Joia laughed at her shooting script in front of the class. She never wrote one again.

Collaborating

Not relationships. What happens when two or more people make something together that neither could make alone.

Permission
The collaborator gives you licence to do something you couldn't justify alone.
Jonathan Anderson
Can't make Loewe alone. Artisans tying Flamenco bag knots rotate every two hours — repetitive strain injuries. The Puzzle bag required leather workers who could slice, glue, and line suède thin enough to stitch without bulk. The garments need the hands that Anderson's sketches can't replace.
Herndon / Dryhurst
Holly makes the music, Mat builds the infrastructure. The AI choir — rebuilding communal singing through technology — requires both a musician and a systems thinker. Neither could justify it alone.
Toby Fox
Couldn't crack the OFF battle theme alone. "Summoned Camellia" to re-remix his track. Even the most solo-authored practitioner in the document needed permission to let someone else in.
Verdy
Gave a pin to Jun Takahashi at a bar — it became a Wasted Youth × Undercover collaboration. Only works with friends. The pop-up is the product: not a sales channel but a creative event that requires the energy of everyone in the room to exist.
Saarinen / Linear
Three Finnish friends met every Wednesday at a corner table in a bar for almost a year. Brought their computers, talked about what they learned. The permission came from each other — shared frustration, shared taste, shared calm. Then they quit their jobs.
Sougwen Chung
Assembled a robotic arm from open-source plans to draw alongside them. It was supposed to copy. It didn\'t — it made small errant movements. Those mistakes became the creative process. Ten years of learning to relinquish control. The systems are not tools — conduits of emotions, often fear and hope.
Correction
The collaborator sees what you can't. Completes the blind spot. Changes the trajectory.
The Row
Fraternal twins who finish each other's sentences and correct each other in real time. "Wait, can I answer the question first, then we can ask it." The correction IS the conversation. Neither edits without the other.
Porto Rocha
Leo says "agency," Felipe keeps saying "studio." Leo is strategy-driven, Felipe is instinct-driven. "If it was just Felipe and I, we would have run out of fuel." The difference sustains it.
Lemaire
Can't cut patterns. Sarah-Linh Tran became co-artistic director in 2014. The collaboration transformed the label — not because she fills his gap, but because two perspectives on "chic and utilitarian" are richer than one.
Moniker
Luna brings dance and physical movement. Roel brings systems and technology. Deep Soup needed both — the embodied and the structural. "She said it very well. It was very well put, Luna."
Neri&Hu
Lyndon is better at concept stage and drawing. Rossana at development stage and words. 110 people, 30 languages, but many small studios inside one practice. The correction is built into the daily making — two cultural backgrounds producing architecture neither would make alone.
Scale
The work becomes bigger than one person's output. The group becomes the author.
Brian Collins / COLLINS
"Nothing great is made alone." Names every team member on every project. Both parents died — "my team accelerated while I was gone. I should go away more often." The team IS the practice.
Nendo / Sato
"Like a soccer game with elementary school kids, where everyone is swarming around one ball." Deliberately rejected hierarchy. The Japan Pavilion required architects, interior designers, and content teams all in every meeting.
Kéré
Draws plans in the sand for people who can't read architectural drawings. Children bring one stone each morning. Women prepare floors. Men press bricks. The village builds the school together — not as labourers but as co-authors. The building is stronger because they built it.
Visvim / Nakamura
Found a tribal workshop on the Chinese-Vietnam border and asked them to remake 19th-century fabric. They did. Every thread, dye, and trim made bespoke by a global constellation of artisanal workshops. The product is the collaboration — no single person could make it.
Dylan Field / Figma
"Nothing great is made alone" — written by Collins for Figma, but it describes the product itself. A tool whose entire purpose is making collaboration the default.
Sou Fujimoto
The Grand Ring for Expo 2025 Osaka: world's largest wooden structure, 700 metres in diameter, built with traditional Japanese nuki joinery. Hundreds of craftspeople, dozens of engineering teams. The architect as conductor of an orchestra he designed.
Aktar Islam
Seventeen chefs to execute one tasting menu — components on a single plate separated by a thousand years of culinary history. No single chef makes the dish. The menu is a collective act of translation: British produce, Indian heritage, Persian history, all orchestrated together.
Duration
The collaboration outlasts any single project. The making together sustains the practice.
Robertson / Bianco
25 years. Robertson's bread dough reimagined as Bianco's flatbread pizza. Illegal bread from a backyard, illegal mozzarella from a garage. The collaboration predates both businesses — each gave the other permission to cross into new territory.
Es Devlin
28 years of making work with other people's texts — Bono, Beyoncé, Sam Mendes, Wire. She can't start without someone else's story. The practice structurally requires collaboration. The collaborators change, but the method never does.
Moniker
Studio dissolved two years ago. Luna and Roel maintain individual practices now. But Deep Soup took 5 years and they made it together anyway. The collaboration outlasted the company.
Order / Reed + Smyth
Started Standards Manual as a side project at Pentagram. Did it nights and weekends for years. Hamish left first, Jesse six months later. The collaboration survived the leap from employment to independence.
Loose Joints
Bring artists to the atelier in Marseille with no predefined idea. Start with a blank document. Spend days discussing the intention, then arrive together at a first draft. Every book is co-authored — Lewis on production, Sarah on edit, the artist on vision. The covers are always made last.
Torrisi & Carbone / Major Food Group
Three-person triad: Torrisi handles culinary and menus. Carbone oversees branding, plates, cutlery — every sensory dimension. Zalaznick runs new business. When Zalaznick sat down with Carbone, they talked for six hours and discovered they'd been dreaming of the same restaurant.
Ffern
Siblings from a farm in Somerset. Emily writes the story, Owen develops the scent. Brother Matthew makes the films.
Snøhetta
Named after a mountain, not a person. Every second year the studio climbs it together. 400 stakeholders for the World Trade Center. "The political compromise is the best."
Marina Abramović
Twelve years making work with Ulay that neither could have made alone. Rest Energy: leaning on opposite ends of a drawn bow, arrow aimed at her heart. The collaboration required dissolving identity into what they called "The Other." The work demanded two bodies, not one.
Molly Dineen
Being Blacker was made by two people — Dineen behind the camera, Blacker in front of it. Three years. No script, no second takes. He let her in and she let him steer. The film that neither could have made without the other.
Sophie Calle
Take Care of Yourself: 107 women interpreted a breakup email she'd received. A headhunter assessed the ex's employability. A sharpshooter shot it. A parrot ate it. The collaboration was the artwork — her own response was not included.

Outsiders

Not-belonging isn't overcome. It's the vantage point.

The Immigrant
Physically moved between worlds. The gap in the border is where they passed through.
Nendo / Sato
Born in Canada, arrived in Japan at 11. Sees what Japanese people take for granted — mechanical pencils, erasers that collect shavings, candy lids that reseal. "The things they take for granted are cool."
Porto Rocha
Both from São Paulo to New York. Spent years trying to copy European style before realizing: "What is special about our work is that we come from a place with different references."
Kéré
Sent away from Gando at 7. Educated in Germany. Returns to build for the village that sent him away. The crossing goes both directions.
Wales Bonner
British-Jamaican. Always on the bus between Dulwich and Stockwell. "I would always see different kinds of people getting on and off — traditional dress and sportswear, all being mixed." Could have been a curator, an artist, a historian. Chose fashion.
Willo Perron
Cultural loneliness in Montreal, crossing every world alone — music, fashion, architecture, retail. Confluence as design method. "The gap tooth is the personality."
Tartine / Robertson
Texas → Northern California → San Francisco → LA → Seoul. No fixed home, exchange students as childhood friends. "I don't really have like a home in my mind." Every new city becomes home through the bakery.
Gerhard Richter
Dresden, 1932. Visited documenta II in 1959 and knew he had to leave. In 1961, he and Ema fled East Germany via West Berlin — shortly before the Wall went up. Destroyed his early work. Started again.
The Wrong Room
Entered through a door meant for someone else. The wrong discipline, the wrong training, the wrong instinct.
Trevor Paglen
PhD in geography, not art. Scuba diver finding NSA cables. Went undercover in prisons. The wrong room every time, deliberately.
Brian Collins / COLLINS
Wanted to animate for Disney. Became a graphic designer instead. Brought animation INTO design — the wrong room became the new room.
Lemaire
Never learned pattern cutting. Started at 19, tried pattern school, had to stop — "it was unrealistic." His biggest regret became his sharpest edge. Perfects what his eye can do because his hands can't.
Escobedo
Too shy for art. Chose architecture as "safer." Made recessive buildings that don't impose — the shyness became the architecture.
Porto Rocha / Felipe
"If there wasn't homophobia in Brazil, I would have pursued a career as a dancer." Design was the allowed substitute. The wrong room, but the creative energy found a way through.
Order / Jesse Reed
"Had no idea what Pentagram was in college." Professor mentioned Michael Bierut, a past student. Reed tried to emulate his work without knowing the landscape. The ignorance was the advantage — no reverence, just appetite.
Floating Points
PhD in neuroscience of pain at UCL. The wrong room for a musician — but the scientific training shaped music that stores feeling as data, emotion as precision.
Molly Dineen
This little white girl in a dance with big Black people and she\'s got her lights on — people used to stop her from filming. Made films almost exclusively about men. Lives on friends\' floors. No crew.
Aktar Islam
Better restaurants weren't open to him because of his ethnic background. No formal training. Started in mainstream curry houses. Now the first British-born Bangladeshi chef with two Michelin stars — with a kitchen where only one of twelve chefs is Indian.
Sou Fujimoto
Wanted to study physics but couldn't understand anything. Chose architecture knowing only one architect. Six years after university with no job, just thinking. The outsider who dissolved every boundary between inside and outside.
Perplexity / Escha Vera
Runs a record label. Makes art. "I left Descript and I kind of felt like maybe my career is over." First day at Perplexity — no design system, handed keys to Comet browser. A record label person in a tech company. Built the system from scratch.
Christopher Anderson
NBA injury ended a basketball career. The spatial intelligence from the court — reading movement, anticipating position — became the camera eye. The wrong room for an athlete. The right room for a photographer.
George Saunders
Geophysical engineering degree. Oil prospecting in Sumatra. Chicken Unlimited delivery boy, jug hustler, roofer, knuckle puller, doorman. Wrote his first book on a company keyboard during his lunch break at a technical writing job.
Luc Tuymans
Thrown out of every art academy. Paid for his own first show — a gallery that only showed post-conceptual work. People understood the paintings not as paintings but as images. That framing stuck for decades. Coming out with the work at the worst possible moment, therefore the right moment.
Simone Bodmer-Turner
Studied literature, not art. Worked in restaurant kitchens, on farms, at a food start-up. Found clay in a studio around the corner from a tiny Williamsburg apartment — too messy to paint at home. Evening classes while working full time. After a few years fighting an undeniable pull, she ditched the day job.
Sougwen Chung
Father an opera singer, mother a computer programmer. Played violin. Coded their first website at nine. Ancestry of calligraphers. Made ink drawings for years. Then assembled a robotic arm at MIT Media Lab at 29. The artist the art world doesn\'t know how to categorise.
The Uninvited
Wasn't supposed to be here at all. No access, no invitation, no precedent.
Sumayya Vally
Born in an Apartheid-designated township, 4 days after Mandela's release. "Architecture told us what we deserved." Youngest architect ever commissioned for the Serpentine Pavilion.
MSCHF
Rural North Carolina. No TV, no movies, no music. West Point dropout. Critiquing a culture they were never inside. The distance is the clarity.
Gaggan Anand
Wanted to be a drummer. Poverty ended that. Entered cooking for survival, not passion. Progressive Indian cuisine became the rebellion against every institution that said he didn't belong.
Torrisi & Carbone / Major Food Group
Italian-American fine dining wasn't taken seriously. They believed the cuisine deserved the same reverence as any other. Carbone invented pasta a la presse — a historical duck press "never used that way. We use the tool in a way it's intended, just in a way that's never been done before.""
The Row
Celebrity teenagers entering high fashion. Julie Gilhart at Barneys was "hesitant" about stocking them. "It sold out immediately because it was good product. From the beginning they broke all the rules."
Tré Seals
Brain tumors at age 4. Drawing as pain relief. No path to type design — built one. Historical justice through letterforms nobody had made before.
Tyler, the Creator
Weird kid mocked for liking Jamiroquai. Never met his father. No invitation to any scene. Built every scene himself — music, fashion, festival, TV, brand.
Daniel Arnold
Self-taught photographer. No credentials, no MFA, no gallery representation. Depression as release valve. Loneliness in a new city. Walked 8 hours a day until the city became his.
Thom Browne
No fashion education. Failed actor. Sold his car to get to New York. Made five suits and wore them on the street. People were horrified. No invitation to the fashion world — built his own entrance.
David Fincher
Simon Fields at Limelight wrote back: this guy has no talent, we have no interest. Built Propaganda Films from the back room with the janitorial staff. PA cleaning garbage cans at John Korty\'s shop, head of the visual effects department a year and a half later.
The Self-Exile
Chose to leave. The door is open because they opened it themselves.
Phoebe Philo
Left Céline in 2018. Could have stayed — chose not to. Returned on her own terms: no shows, no seasons, no storytelling, majority owner. The departure was the design decision.
Visvim / Nakamura
No TV, no newspapers, no movies — "nothing commercial." Lives in an Edo-period house. Goes barefoot. The self-exile is daily: he removes himself from the commercial world to see clearly.
Are.na / Broskoski
Builds against the attention economy that employs every other tech founder. Delaware C Corp named "When It Changed." Aspires to a 1,300-year-old hot spring. The exile is from the industry's own logic.
Loose Joints
Left London for Marseille after Brexit destroyed European economics. Pace over proximity. The photobook as an act of choosing distance.
Moniker
Dissolved the studio. Luna and Roel maintain individual practices now. The dissolution wasn't failure — it was a design decision. "Take off your headset."
Jonathan Anderson
Off social media entirely. Stays home in silence doing laundry and gardening. The creative director of two major houses who exiles himself from the world those houses serve.
Brûlé / Monocle
Canadian in Zurich. Moved the business out of London after Brexit. "Sitting in Zurich, the continent moves further away from the UK, further from the United States. There is an Anglo narrative of how we see the world." Chose to see from outside it.
Dimitris Papaioannou
Ran away at 18. Painter who left painting for silent theater — images not words. Left Greece, left his discipline, left language itself. The exile is total.
Da Corte
Born in Camden. Father from Venezuela. Lost his intestines at 18. "The world that would complete me is both here and there, near and far."
Richard Prince
Born in the Panama Canal Zone. Proto-CIA parents. First acid on Sunset Strip. Guerrilla show in the Time-Life basement — nobody saw it.
Marina Abramović
Left Yugoslavia on a three-week visa. Being naked under a burning star was radical in Belgrade. In Amsterdam, nobody cared. Forty-seven years before her own city invited her back.
Sophie Calle
Joined a Maoist group. Trained with Palestinian fedayeen. Sold vacuums, farmed cannabis, worked in a circus. First tried photography at twenty-six because it pleased her father but was not really art.
Molly Dineen
Made films almost exclusively about men. Lives on friends' floors. No crew. This little white girl in a dance with big Black people and her lights on — people used to stop her from filming.

Frictions

The three things they push against — and what it costs them to keep pushing.

"We don't like style as a social disguise. We're interested in style as something deeper, something to do with feeling yourself." — Christophe Lemaire

Refusal is the most misunderstood move in this whole project. From the outside it looks like contrarianism — saying no to look interesting. From the inside it's the opposite: saying no is what protects the conditions under which the work stays theirs.

But not every refusal is the same. Three appear over and over.

One. Systems
The rules the world tries to impose. The calendar, the pitch, the platform, the logo police, the standard process. The easiest refusals because they're external — you can name them, and naming them is half the fight. The system says do it this way; they don't.
Phoebe Philo
"I don't know why there has to be such a beginning and end in our industry." Rejects seasons, shows, the fashion calendar. Views her work as one continuous collection. The system says divide. She refuses.
Porto Rocha
Launched nofreepitches.com. 7,000 signatures. "We were being exploited by a system where they use interesting projects as bait for agencies to compete against each other." Changed the rule.
Nendo / Sato
Rejected the standard Japanese construction process for the Japan Pavilion. "If the construction process is the same, the results will inevitably be similar." Chose a method nobody had used before.
Trevor Paglen
Makes the invisible visible. Secret military sites, undersea cables, how AI categorizes humans. The infrastructure of control, turned into art.
Tartine / Robertson
His own team says "Chad, that's not Tartine." The system he built pushes back against his evolution. He pushes through anyway. "A big part of what we do is evolution."
Leland Maschmeyer / COLLINS
"Who wants to be the logo police? That's not the right color. That's not the right use. The world's done with that." Brand systems should enable creativity, not imprison it.
Lemaire
"We're not Margaret Howell. I have huge respect for her consistency, but there's more than that." The system rewards consistency. He wants consistency AND movement. Both.
The Row
"We've done everything opposite to a lot of other people." No shows at first. No creative director title announced. No press. Built a $250–300M business by refusing every convention of how fashion brands launch.
Formafantasma
Challenge how the design industry treats materials — as surface, not substance. Bring scientists and historians into the process. The system says pick a material and style it. They say understand where it comes from first.
Brûlé / Monocle
"Instagram is great if you've got a hair salon." Won't chase TikTok. Won't do work-from-home. Won't accept that digital replaces print. Record profitability year — all paper. Refuses every convention of how media is supposed to work now.
Kojima
Total authorship at industrial scale — writes, directs, designs, produces. Every camera angle hand-placed in a 40-hour experience. Invented his own genre term rather than accept existing categories. Left Konami after 29 years rather than accept corporate control over his vision.
Saarinen / Linear
Designed for someone, not everyone. Opinionated defaults against infinite customization. Refuses the Silicon Valley obsession with speed and scale. Saw hyper-growth dilute culture at Airbnb and Coinbase. Built the opposite.
Herndon / Dryhurst
Co-founded Spawning to build a consent layer for AI. Reject the binary: you're either pro-AI or pro-artist. The question isn't the technology — it's the governance. Built the tools that let artists say yes or no to how their work is used.
David Fincher
Alien 3: was told to work with experienced people instead of his own. Those people resented him and his age. He made a crucial error — he listened to the people who were paying for the movie. He never made that error again. The marketing department said men don't want Brad Pitt shirtless and women don't want him bloody. He does not make Big Macs.
Sougwen Chung
AI is a concept. It's not an entity, it's not the singularity. Once you start building your own systems, you realise it's a product of our imagination. And if it's a product of our imagination, we can imagine better. Only uses their own personal data. Trains their own models.
Two. Ease
The much harder one. Ease isn't imposed — it's offered. AI as co-author. The smooth tool. The optimization that removes friction. Ease is the system trying to feel like a kindness. Refusing systems requires anger. Refusing ease requires faith — that the harder path is producing something the easier path can't.
Moniker
"All these concepts that come along with AI is all about comfort and ease. You don't have to sweat anymore. This mindset is not how we get connected in the world." Wrote a whole manifesto for friction.
Visvim / Nakamura
"If you stay in an inorganic space for a long time, your senses become numb." For Hiroki, "afford" means accomplishing everything without compromising vision. First Tokyo store in a basement across from an elementary school. "That was the best I could do, but it was still cool." No TV, no newspapers, no movies. Drives a 1963 car that breaks down constantly. The inconvenience is the point.
Are.na / Broskoski
Won't optimize for engagement. 15 years protecting conditions for active attention — building the opposite of what every other platform builds. The slow tool in the fast economy.
Vo Trong Nghia
Depression since childhood. Buried himself in studies. Known for his uncontrollable temper. Spent three years in silent meditation in the forest. Came back transformed — now called "Teacher Nghia." Supports hundreds facing depression and bipolar disorder through meditation classes.
Tartine / Robertson
6 years developing grain before using it. Could have bought commercial flour. Chose to wait for the grain to be ready. "We never mastered this."
Leland Maschmeyer / COLLINS
"AI has eliminated the craft mode that used to separate creators from non-creators. That mode is gone." The easy path now produces polished mediocrity. Excellence requires what ease cannot give.
Brûlé / Monocle
Physical magazine against digital everything. Physical retail. Physical radio. "Go there, see it, touch it." Every decision pushes against the ease of doing it all from a screen.
Simone Bodmer-Turner
Lost the kiln when she left Brooklyn. Made the constraint the concept — an entire exhibition from bronze, silk, and lacquered wood. Producing at scale was not the right path — she was mainly managing the studio, not making. Now one assistant and direct client work.
Three. The version of you that someone else wrote
The deepest refusal and the one with the highest cost. The thing they refuse isn't the world's expectation — it's their own performance of it. The label that replaces the person. The shorthand someone else gave them. The public self that the private self can't survive.
The Row
"How many other people are called 'the girls' when they're designing? We're 37 years old. We have had very interesting lives." Being named by someone else's shorthand is the thing they resist most.
Lemaire
A leather tab on the back waistband was "pornography" to his team. "We don't like style as a social disguise. We're interested in style as something deeper, something to do with feeling yourself."
Visvim / Nakamura
Chrome tanning clogs the pores. Modern tatami has plastic inside. "There's no point in making them look the same on the surface." The outside must match the inside or it means nothing.
Toby Fox
Does the OFF music for free. Calls it "fanmusic." "Trying to replace those songs feels like breaking into somebody's house and pasting your face into their family photo album." Won't claim what isn't his.
Blazy
20 years in the anonymous white coat before becoming creative director of Bottega Veneta. The invisibility wasn't hiding — it was refusing to claim credit for work that wasn't ready to be claimed.
Tyler, the Creator
The parasocial fear. Millions of people think they know him. The loudest public person fights hardest for the private self that the public version can never reach.
Moniker
Won't use AI as co-author. Experimented extensively. "When you use AI as a co-creator, it's often so boring. We got bored." The authentic voice is the one that struggled, not the one that was generated.
Porto Rocha / Felipe
"For a long time I was always trying to copy the style of my European friends. I became much happier when I understood that what is special about my work is my background and where I come from."
Faye Toogood
Hid femininity for years for fear of judgment. Then: "Fuck it." Circles, color, softness. The authenticity wasn't always there — it was fought for. The refusal to keep hiding became the work.
Cecily Brown
"A really deep art shame that it's probably hard for young artists to understand. It was embarrassing." Varnished paintings to hide the gesture. Signed her first name to deflate the machismo. Turned shame into levity.
Jonathan Anderson
Describes himself as reserved, uncomfortable with the social role. Off social media. Doesn't keep his own clothes at home. The creative director of Dior whose private life refuses to look like Dior.
Thom Browne
Can't fashion sketch. Runs in tailored clothes. Same suit every day for decades. The man who dresses most distinctively lives most repetitively. The uniform IS the authenticity — no gap between the person and the work.
Ffern
Four seasonal fragrances. No more bottles than names on the ledger. Half a million wait list. "We quite like the divisiveness."
Taryn Simon
An American Index took four years. Disney said no. The nuclear facility said yes. Both became part of the work. "My failures to enter could be incorporated."
Sophie Calle
Claims everything is completely true. Except one room, which was completely fake. Incapable of inventing — but there is no truth-value to the work. The oversharing is a strategy: she chooses one moment and tells nothing of what came before or after.
Molly Dineen
The cutting room is a disaster. Every good film needs edge — undermining, contradicting — but she has a loyalty to every subject. Avoids a core conflict to keep her access. The kindness costs her in the edit.
Aktar Islam
Felt exploited and suffocated at his restaurant group. Left in 2016 for freedom. Built Opheem from scratch. Quality over volume — shortest opening hours in the city. Margins as low as three percent while the government treats hospitality as a cash cow.
Marina Abramović
Rhythm 0: seventy-two objects on a table — rose, feather, scalpel, loaded gun. Invited the audience to do whatever they wanted for six hours. They cut her clothes. Drew blood. Pointed the gun at her neck. When she stood up, everyone ran.
Gerhard Richter
Ambivalence. The Baader-Meinhof paintings: never left wing, never a Marxist, painted them anyway — the human predicament of his generation. Birkenau: years trying to make a picture of the Holocaust, never finding the means. Then four abstract paintings over Sonderkommando photographs. The abstraction covers the horror.
George Saunders
The first move most of us make when we write is to put up a front — imitating the beloved writers we've known. At some point you squirm because the things you actually know aren't showing up. His question to students: how are you charming in real life? Is that there in your writing? Instead of keeping your best gifts outside the door, you let them in.
Luc Tuymans
Not the type of painter that creates a style, because that's the death of everything. Of course there's a mark, but the mark is like handwriting. The Gas Chamber painting, 1986 — having not experienced such horrors, he didn't think it was morally possible. But nevertheless, he did.
The cost

The chapter would be too clean if it stopped there. It doesn't. Every refusal has a price. Molly Dineen's loyalty to her subjects costs her in the edit — her cutting room is a disaster because she won't undermine the people who let her in. Cecily Brown lived inside "deep art shame" for years before she could paint without varnishing over the move. Richter spent decades trying to paint the Holocaust and couldn't, then made four abstract paintings over Sonderkommando photographs and called the abstraction itself a kind of cover. Refusal pushed too far becomes paralysis, or self-righteousness, or a brand built on saying no to things that should have been said yes to. The practitioners in this chapter aren't celebrated for refusing. They're celebrated for knowing which refusals were worth what they cost.

Practice

The thing they do every day. The thing they've done for decades. The thing their body knows that their mind hasn't caught up with. Repetition isn't habit. It's structure.

The Fixed Routine
The thing that never changes. The sameness creates a container for everything else to change inside.
Thom Browne
Same gray suit. Same lunch. Same walk to work. Every day for decades. The uniform is the ritual is the identity. Everything inside the suit can change because the suit never does.
Teenage Engineering / Kouthoofd
Rehearses organ badly every night for 5 years — to design one. Not practicing to get good. Practicing to understand what the instrument needs to be.
Daniel Arnold
Walks 8 hours a day, every day, because fear is the engine. Shoots from the hip without looking through the viewfinder — "unless I use the viewfinder, you don't know I'm taking a picture." The cheap satisfaction of "it's in focus and it's in the box" wears off over time.
Visvim / Nakamura
Wakes at 5am, makes breakfast, takes his daughter to school. No TV, no newspapers, no movies. At antique markets, ignores the merchant and reads the maker's emotional state from the object. On the curb mid-conversation, he looks at his own trousers and drifts off — "I don't like this part, so I'm taking space out of here."
Jonathan Anderson
Mind-maps outward from a centre. Never finishes a collection until the day of the show. When stuck, cleans everything — every cupboard, every window. Doesn't sketch on paper. Designs by draping on the body, giving pieces a sculptural quality.
Blazy
Works on the stand in the round, Belgian style — manipulating fabric, not sketching at a desk. Designs come back from the Paris atelier and half the time he thinks "hell, what is that!" Every day adjusting and rethinking. Communicates wordlessly with Marie-Valentine Girbal — "at some point, we just got in sync."
Molly Dineen
Handheld. Eye level. Never looks through the viewfinder. Six months on the Underground before filming a single frame. Not having a chat and then picking up the camera because then she has lost it.
Aktar Islam
The daily promise: be the best you can be today, be better tomorrow. Seventeen chefs for one menu. Shortest opening hours in the city. Components on a single plate separated by a thousand years of culinary history.
Sou Fujimoto
Sketchbooks numbered from student days — year, date, book number. Words, sketches, models, and discussions. Hundreds of conceptual models until a solution emerges. Many ideas kept in play as operational variants — they fuse and mutate as the project evolves.
Luc Tuymans
Analyses for months — images on the iPhone, on the computer, photographs, films. Then one day. One burst. The intelligence goes from head to hands. Still nervous before every start. The minute he loses this nervousness he thinks he loses everything. Comes back weeks later for adjustments barely visible to the naked eye.
The Practice That IS The Work
The ritual isn't separate from the output. The doing and the making are the same activity.
Satisfy / Partouche
Sacred morning run alone — "it's not being anti-social, it's an opportunity to be with yourself." Pattern maker Kotaro spends a week on a single pair of shorts. Everything developed in-house with nine people. Powerslave by Iron Maiden for a 10K at 5 min/km — "I know it is exactly 50 minutes."
The Row
"On the floor with some pins and some scissors." Ashley: "Adjusting and shaping a garment." Asked where they're happiest — the answer is the work itself. The making is the ritual.
Brian Collins / COLLINS
Drew Helvetica by hand for 6 months at 17 under Marjorie Katz. "When you're drawing Helvetica for six months of your life, it becomes embedded into your neural net because it's physiology." The hand teaches the eye.
Lemaire
"I'm an old guy, I still sketch, which is rare these days." Scénario first — the pitch for the collection. Then fabric, silhouette, product. Albums before songs. "If they don't have any irrationality, they might be boring."
Cecily Brown
50 canvases at once. Can't paint from life — "too hard." Works from copies. Keeps an ongoing list of titles. Signs just "Cecily" on the front. The painting practice IS the thinking — "things just get abstract really quickly."
Vo Trong Nghia
"I can meditate eight hours a day, to spend one hour doing good architecture." Staff meditate for two hours daily. His first project — Wind and Water Café — had no client. Purchased 7,000 bamboo stalks and built it himself.
Moniker
Luna is placing a ballet floor in her studio this week. Roel freelances elsewhere. They still collaborate on one film. "Our work was never a recipe you can give to others." When they did work together: daily observation, weekly writing, constant argument about what technology does to the body.
Dimitris Papaioannou
Silent theater — no text, no recorded sound. Long-term ensembles rehearse for months in Athens. "Talented people are willing to leave their homes and take an apartment in Athens to work with me." A painter who left painting because the body could say what the brush couldn't.
Christopher Anderson
Shoots film. Stands so close that Susie Wiles told him to back up. Most work from the hip — the composition is the commentary. Moved from war zones to his son Atlas. "The smallest gesture had more power than anything I had witnessed."
Herndon / Dryhurst
Training ceremonies where participants sing to the AI. 15 UK choirs recorded for The Call. The audience contributes the data. The practice of communal singing IS the training of the model. The ritual and the technology are the same act.
Marina Abramović
The Artist Is Present: sat in a chair from museum open to close, three months, 1,565 pairs of eyes. Trained herself never to use the bathroom during hours. Breathed air into the space between organs to make pain disappear.
Sophie Calle
Three weeks as a hotel maid. Following a stranger through Venice in a blonde wig. Telling the story of her heartbreak every day until the pain lost its power. The repetition was the cure.
Molly Dineen
Handheld. Eye level. Never looks through the viewfinder. Six months on the Underground before filming a single frame. The lens absolutely parallel. Not having a chat and then picking up the camera — you\'ve got to keep people on the boil.
David Fincher
Stabilises every shot. Touches every frame. Captures 20% larger than needed, then digitally corrects for the slightest trembles. Camera moves only when the actor does, at the same speed. Soderbergh watched him circle a quarter-stop-too-bright wall section with a laser pointer and had to leave the room to breathe.
Gerhard Richter
The squeegee: moving different sizes across the canvas, sometimes slowly and carefully, sometimes forcefully. Chance requires discipline — otherwise they\'d just be smears of paint. Picture-making consists of a multitude of yes/no decisions. With a yes to end it all. In 4 years he knows whether a photograph becomes a painting or nothing.
George Saunders
A shed on a hill in Corralitos. Steps inside and his subconscious knows it\'s showtime. Lets his eye fall on the text. Starts to lightly read. Feels his opinion kick in — cut that phrase, for sure — and he\'s writing. Hundreds of revisions. Taking out the chatter. The result just feels more undeniable. It has the ring of truth.
Sougwen Chung
Six generations of D.O.U.G. Each building on the last — mimicry, memory, city surveillance, bio-feedback, meditation, brainwaves. The flow state becomes more adaptive in each oscillation. That process is the art itself. Painting is the best medium because it has the most slippage.
The Return
Going back to the same place, material, or question. The path goes out and comes back, slightly different each time.
Tartine / Robertson
Four ingredients, 38-page recipe. Chopping wood at 3am, feeding the sourdough. Wood-fired oven burning eight hours while he mixes doughs. Always a two-day process that overlaps. "I was the white rhino — you could see me through the window."
Order / Jesse Reed
One designer per project, start to finish. Learned from Bierut: "Each designer owns the research, the presentations, the deliverables. No competition." The bookstore in the Greenpoint studio has landed clients — Adidas walked in for a book and walked out commissioning a brand identity.
Phoebe Philo
Works on the stand — draping, cutting, adjusting on the dress form. Five key designers. Let them take the bow at her first show back from maternity leave. "I did not feel like bullshitting. It was not my work." Work in progress right up until the show.
Moniker
Designed environments where process can take place — then observed what emerged. "We were basically studying an ant farm." Performances in concert buildings, floor sticker installations in museums, participatory video clips. "We don't fit any box."
Are.na / Broskoski
Collecting is thinking. Finds gathering references "infinitely pleasurable" and writing "excruciating." Goes back through his own channels like visiting a gallery. Doesn't design by building and shipping. Designs by holding and looking.
Lemaire
"What do you need every day? The storage, the pocket system, the movement, the weather, the breathability." Combines utilitarian design with something interesting in proportion. Works in nuances — faded colours, smoky colours. "Sometimes people think it's just 50 shades of mushroom."
Peter Zumthor
Models in the material of the building itself — not drawings, not computers. "This is not about talking. This is about looking and feeling." A thousand possibilities in one stone alone. The watercolours appear only when the composition already has a body.
Kojima
Parents' film ritual continued into adulthood — still watches films nightly. Visits bookstores in every city. 30 years returning to the same subject: connection across isolation. Metal Gear, Death Stranding, Death Stranding 2 — the same question asked in new forms.
Kéré
Draws plans in the sand for people who can't read architectural drawings. The village builds together — children bring one stone each morning, women prepare floors, men press bricks. He had to prove local material could be better than concrete. The building process is the architecture.
Ffern
Each fragrance begins with Emily writing a short story from a specific memory. The story becomes a moodboard, the moodboard guides the scent. Owen develops it with their in-house Nose through two-stage barrel ageing. Released four times a year at equinox and solstice.
Simone Bodmer-Turner
Giving up the Brooklyn studio was one of the hardest decisions she\'d ever made. Now a farmhouse in western Massachusetts — kilns in a barn, a former mill, the basement. The practice shifts seasonally. When you\'re in the city ordering premixed clay from a factory, it becomes disjointed. Pruning apple trees toward a distant future harvest.

Origins

The moment before the work began. A loss, an absence, an encounter, a refusal. The thing that happened that made this specific person make this specific work.

Loss
Something was taken. The work fills the space left behind.
Kojima
Father died at 13. Loneliness became the subject. Every game since is about connection. Every story is paternal. The loss is the engine of 30 years of work.
Ghotmeh
Won the Estonian National Museum competition at 26 — arrived without an office, handed the jury a business card. "I grew up in Lebanon. Nothing is given to you. You have to learn to survive and just do things and dream, and make them happen."
Tré Seals
Refurbished chicken coop on the family farm in Accokeek, Maryland. Parents still do invoicing on a typewriter. Ancestry room with portraits from the 1800s. Great-great-grandfather built the family home in 1908. Great-great-grandmother was the bank to the Black community.
Kahlil Joseph
Brother Noah's death. The absent archive. BLKNWS as conceptual journalism — building the record that didn't exist for the person who was lost.
Herndon / Dryhurst
Displacement from church community. The communal singing was taken. The AI choir rebuilds it — communal singing through technology, replacing what was lost with what's possible.
Vo Trong Nghia
Childhood depression. Cluster bombs. No electricity. Everything was taken. 1,000 days of meditation in Myanmar. Then: architecture that reconnects humans with nature. Building back what war destroyed.
Cecily Brown
Painting was embarrassing. London in the '90s — "a really deep art shame." Used to varnish everything to hide the gesture. Moved to New York because it was the only place you could grow as a painter. 25 years later: a Met retrospective.
Daniel Arnold
Loneliness in a new city. Depression as release valve. The connection to place was missing — so he walked 8 hours a day until the city became his. The loss of belonging produced the method of finding it.
Gaggan Anand
Got drunk in September 2009 and called a friend: "I'm doing a restaurant." Within a week he'd resigned. His team of 65 defied every poaching attempt — "one of the most powerful moments of my life." As a child, he and his father created menus from fresh produce.
Kéré
Sent away from his family at 7. His community, his safety — taken. The suffocating classroom — 100 children, no ventilation, no light. Childhood itself was the loss. The architecture gives back what was taken — light, air, community, dignity.
Sophie Calle
When her mother died, she bought a stuffed giraffe and named it Monique. It stands in her studio. Her mother is dead and did not choose to return as a stuffed giraffe, but there she is.
Marina Abramović
Both parents were Partisan national heroes. Father survived the Igman March — one night, minus twenty-five, two hundred survivors. Left Yugoslavia on a three-week visa. Every restriction she broke became material for the next work.
Gerhard Richter
Uncle Rudi killed on the Western Front. Aunt Marianne murdered at Großschweidnitz under the euthanasia programme. Father was a Nazi Party member, banned from teaching after the war. Mother gave him culture — literature, music. Mother gave him a camera for Christmas in 1945.
Absence
Something was never there. The work builds what was missing.
Satisfy / Partouche
No brand existed for the run he experienced. Not performance running, not fashion running — the run as felt experience. The absence was the brief. He made what was missing.
Linear / Saarinen
Ugly bicycle at age 7. Beautiful software didn't exist. "Unnecessary ugliness" became a personal offense. Opinionated software as the response to what shouldn't have been absent.
Teenage Engineering / Kouthoofd
Father drew beautifully but couldn't sell. The market for personal, idiosyncratic design didn't exist. The son built a company where product IS personality. Made the market his father never had.
Lemaire
Pattern cutting was never learned. Started at 19, tried school, had to stop. The skill was absent — so everything else had to be sharper. Eye, fabric, proportion, styling. The gap became the edge.
Are.na / Broskoski
del.icio.us died. The tool for active, intentional attention disappeared. Nobody was building it back. So he did. 15 years filling an absence the market didn't recognize.
Sophie Calle
The negative space where someone has been. Uses the outline to discern the person — like a painter whose sitters have got up and left. Photographs uncomposed and overexposed. Even a piece of orange peel suddenly seems suspicious. The most intimate details turn out to be the least interesting.
Encounter
Something was seen or experienced that changed everything. The work extends the encounter.
Visvim / Nakamura
Teenager discovering American outdoor gear. Just thought it was cool. Then asked why. Realized it was the purpose, not the appearance. 22 years of one question: what's underneath the surface?
Es Devlin
Rye, then Cranbrook. Art teacher took them into forests to build shelters. Set to study at Saint Martins, visited the Motley Theatre Design Course instead. "I didn't actually read the stage directions." Hired 30 from 500 — all trained architects who'd worked in music and film.
Brian Collins / COLLINS
Saw Chuck Jones lecture about Road Runner timing. Yellow Ball Workshop as a child — stop-motion with cardboard cutouts. The encounter with animation became a life in design that moves.
Order / Jesse Reed
Youngstown, Ohio. $3,000 and a Craigslist air mattress. Three years of silence at Pentagram absorbing Bierut. When he said he was leaving: "I knew it. I just thought maybe you'd wait another year." Then a hug. Order founded over breakfast in five hours.
Nendo / Sato
Arrived in Japan at 11 from Canada. "Mechanical pencils that extend when you shake them, erasers that collect shavings." The encounter with Japanese everyday design became a career of making the overlooked visible.
Tartine / Robertson
Baking in a backyard in Marshall, California. Living in a blacksmith-adventurer's house. Firing a wood oven at 3am. The encounter with bread at its most basic — 60 loaves, no permit, $100 fine — set the trajectory.
Porto Rocha / Felipe
Accepted at Fabrica to work for Colors Magazine in Treviso. "First time I traveled abroad, first time I had to speak English." One encounter opened everything — "it really changed my life."
Floating Points
Manchester. UK garage banging from the pub across the road. Teenage ritual of haunting record shops. 5,000 records, girlfriend, and studio equipment all in his bedroom — "I had to crawl under the mixing desk to get into bed."
Christopher Anderson
NBA injury. Basketball ended but the spatial intelligence stayed — reading movement, anticipating position, seeing the geometry of bodies in space. The court trained the camera eye.
Molly Dineen
Boyfriend\'s father: a colonial old man back in England. Kept filming when he struggled in the kitchen instead of helping. Gave him a tripod interview for dignity. Derek the ticket seller who wouldn\'t let her into his booth. Blacker\'s mother\'s funeral — two hundred people on the block.
Aktar Islam
At family gatherings, always in the kitchen — which turned heads because traditionally it was the women's domain. Father's restaurant from age 13. Kicked out of school. Hard work became his best friend. The kitchen was the only place he ever felt ultimate freedom.
Sou Fujimoto
Playing in wild forests on Hokkaido as a child — not thinking about architecture. Then moving to Tokyo and finding the same loose order amid the confusion of the city's streets. Two archetypes: the natural order and the artificial world. Contradictory, but fused in his mind.
Perplexity / Escha Vera
"I left Descript and I kind of felt like maybe my career is over." First day at Perplexity — no design system, handed keys to Comet browser. One encounter with a blank slate rebuilt a career from scratch.
Wales Bonner
Bus rides across south London between separated parents. Between neighborhoods, between cultures, between identities. The encounter wasn't one moment — it was the daily crossing that became the method of research as practice.
Peter Zumthor
Aunt's door handle. The temperature of the brass, the weight, the sound of the latch. One childhood encounter with how a building feels to the body — and 50 years of architecture built from that memory.
David Fincher
Marin County. George Lucas lived two doors down. Saw Butch Cassidy at 7 and thought the job took three weeks. Then saw a documentary — Utah in the spring, Wyoming in the winter. You get to ride on trains and blow up firecrackers next to horses and spend time with Katharine Ross?
George Saunders
Sea Oak — started trying to have fun with a male strip club, next thing he knew he was saying exactly what he meant about the essence of capitalism. He taught himself what he thought. Lincoln in the Bardo: twenty years the idea kept eating at him. Every success, the book would say: how about now?
Luc Tuymans
Mother\'s family in the Dutch resistance. Father\'s family were Flemish collaborators. The world became too tormented — a friend shoved a Super 8 camera in his hand and he turned to film. The distance imposed by the lens gave him the means to come back to painting.
Simone Bodmer-Turner
Berkeley childhood, charcoal and oil paint. Then a tiny Williamsburg apartment — too messy to paint at home. Clay studio around the corner. The romance of using a medium created by the intense pressure of the earth compressing rocks, minerals and decaying matter is an act she finds endlessly poetic.
Sougwen Chung
Chinese-Canadian, child of Hong Kong immigrants. The early internet still felt like magic. Then ink drawings for years. Then MIT Media Lab at 29 — and the robotic arm that couldn\'t copy straight. That was the pivot. Everything before: learning to communicate through instruments. Everything after: learning what happens when the instrument talks back.
Refusal
Something was rejected. The work is built from the no.
Phoebe Philo
Refused the pace. Refused seasons. Refused storytelling. Refused interviews for 10 years. Left Céline because the industry "abuses creativity." The entire eponymous label is built from the refusal.
The Row
Refused visibility. Cast at nine months, scrutiny their whole lives. Built the exact opposite — anonymous, authorless, private. "Anonymity is a luxury." The refusal of their childhood IS the brand.
Toby Fox
Refused to be more than one person. Made Undertale essentially alone. Does the OFF music for free, calls it "fanmusic." Won't claim what isn't his. Won't scale. "Alright, see ya."
Moniker
Refused AI as co-author. Refused the frictionless. Refused the platform economy. Dissolved the studio rather than continue on terms that didn't work. Wrote two manifestos to explain why.
Thom Browne
Allentown said no. He sold his car to move to New York. People were "horrified" by the short suit. The ridiculed thing became the identity. The refusal to change in the face of mockery IS the origin.
Tyler, the Creator
Refused to stop being weird. Mocked for liking Jamiroquai. Never met his father. Every scene rejected him so he built every scene himself — music, fashion, festival, TV, brand. The refusal to fit became the empire.
Faye Toogood
Middle of nowhere, foraging objects in the countryside. No television. Tom Dixon told her to stop throwing things in the bin. "Surely AI will be able to design a better Toogood chair. What can I bring? Humanity and emotion." Wants to design a playground.
Dimitris Papaioannou
Ran away at 18. Refused words — chose silent theater, images not language. Refused painting — chose the body. Refused Greece — chose exile. Every refusal stripped away one more thing until only the essential remained.
Escobedo
Too shy for art. Refused to impose — chose architecture as "safer," then made recessive buildings that refuse to dominate. The shyness wasn't overcome. It became the design principle.
Jonathan Anderson
Rugby family during the Troubles. Refused that path. Went to New York to act. Refused that too — pivoted to fashion. Rejected from every school. Bankrupted multiple times. Kept refusing the thing that was working to reach the next thing.
Torrisi & Carbone / Major Food Group
Rich Torrisi: "Cooking is at its best a spontaneous mood." Got the Puck Building during COVID on a shoestring. Mario Carbone: grew up going to Parkside in Ozone Park. "That was my Carbone before I had a Carbone." Both trained under Daniel Boulud. Met at culinary school in 1998.
Da Corte
Paint dried on CD cases and masked Janet Jackson's smile. The accident became the method. All labour hidden behind the surface.
Richard Prince
"Uncomfortable with things that solely came from me." Silk-screened jokes in ink so toxic it was outlawed. The ink faded. The collector called: the joke has disappeared.
Taryn Simon
Grew up in arcades — grandfather invented games. "Games were like oxygen." The Kleroterion rebuilt from crumbs — no intact one survives anywhere.
Blazy
Lackluster student. Boarding school, then military school in Britain. When he got the biggest job in fashion, moved into a flat with his twin sister. Bought a dead sculptor's house to restore as a shared arts space.
Ffern
A folkloric childhood in Somerset next to one of Europe's first biodynamic herb farms. Great-aunt was a botanist. On a windy day the whole village smelled of dried lavender and thyme.
Dylan Field / Figma
Penngrove, California. Named after Dylan Thomas. Child actor — fell asleep onstage in Peter Pan. Solved algebra at age 6. Dropped out of Brown at 20.
Neri&Hu
Met at the same church growing up. Both worked for Michael Graves. Moved to Shanghai by accident — a three-month project became a year, then a life.
Willo Perron
Father was a jazz pianist. Dropped out of performing arts school at 14. Ran a record shop and rap label in Montreal. Post-referendum exodus — "we grew up with a lot of space and no resources."
Verdy
Born Osaka, 1987. CD jacket designs for punk bands in high school. First trip to LA changed everything. Girls Don't Cry started as a T-shirt gift for his wife.
MSCHF
Founder Gabe Whaley: rural North Carolina, immigrant Korean mother, army father. No TV, no movies, no video games. Two years at West Point, then dropped out. "Imagine leaving a cult and popping up in New York."
Trevor Paglen
Grew up on Air Force bases. PhD in geography. Figured out how to photograph covert sites from the roof of UC Berkeley — 25 miles away. The military doesn't feel alien to him.
Formafantasma
Andrea Trimarchi and Simone Farresin. Both Italian, both left Italy. Met at Design Academy Eindhoven. The absence of personal voice is the data — they redirect every question toward the systemic.
Loose Joints
Lewis studied anthropology. Sarah studied fine art. First project: emailed Richard McGuire about a 12-page comic. Left London for Marseille after Brexit. Studio in the apartment, striking distance from la Bonne Mère.
Snøhetta
Named after a mountain. Craig Dykers: American in Oslo, father a veteran of three wars. Kjetil Thorsen: first climbed the mountain in snow, had sun for five minutes. When they won Alexandria, ran naked from the shower screaming.
Sumayya Vally
Born in Laudium, an Apartheid township, four days after Mandela's release. Architecture was a tool of oppression — "it told us what we deserved." Youngest architect ever for the Serpentine Pavilion.
Tyler Brûlé / Monocle
Founded Monocle in 2007 as a magazine. Eight years later: radio station, six shops, cafes, books. The first shop was a flower shop going out of business around the corner. Seized it.

Perseverance

A number. A story behind it. Click any number to find out what it cost.

A–Z

All practitioners and practices. Alphabetical.

NamePracticeThemes
Abramović, MarinaPerformance Art(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Anderson, ChristopherPhotographyOutsiders · Practice · Origins
Anderson, Jonathan (Loewe / Dior)Fashion(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Are.na / Broskoski, CharlesTechnology(Re)Sources · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Arnold, DanielPhotographyPractice · Outsiders · Origins
Blazy, Matthieu (Bottega Veneta)FashionPractice · Frictions
Bodmer-Turner, SimoneCeramics · Sculpture(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Brown, CecilyPainting(Re)Sources · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Browne, ThomFashion(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Brûlé, Tyler / MonoclePublishing(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Frictions
Calle, SophieArt · Photography · Writing(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Chung, SougwenDrawing · Robotics · AICollaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Collins & Maschmeyer / COLLINSDesign(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Da Corte, AlexArt · Video · InstallationOutsiders · Origins · Practice
Devlin, EsStage DesignCollaborating · Origins
Dineen, MollyDocumentary Film(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Escobedo, FridaArchitectureOutsiders · Origins
Ffern / Cameron & MearsFragrance · Film(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Practice · Origins
Field, Dylan (Figma)TechnologyCollaborating
Fincher, DavidFilm(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Floating Points / Sam ShepherdMusicOutsiders · Origins
FormafantasmaDesign(Re)Sources · Frictions · Origins
Fox, TobyGaming · MusicCollaborating · Frictions · Origins
Fujimoto, SouArchitecture(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Practice · Origins
Gaggan AnandFoodOutsiders · Origins
Ghotmeh, LinaArchitectureOrigins
Herndon, Holly / Dryhurst, MatMusic · AICollaborating · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Islam, AktarFood(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Practice · Origins
Joseph, KahlilFilmOrigins
Kojima, HideoGaming(Re)Sources · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Kouthoofd, Jesper / Teenage EngineeringTechnology · ProductPractice · Origins
Kéré, Diébédo FrancisArchitecture(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Practice · Origins
Lemaire, ChristopheFashion(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Loose JointsPublishing(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders
Moniker / Maurer + WoutersDesign · Interactive(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
MSCHF / Whaley, GabrielArt · ProductOutsiders
Nakamura, Hiroki / VisvimFashion · Craft(Re)Sources · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Neri&HuArchitectureCollaborating
Paglen, TrevorArt · GeographyOutsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Papaioannou, DimitrisPerformanceOutsiders · Practice · Origins
Partouche, Brice / SatisfyProduct · Running(Re)Sources · Practice · Origins
Perplexity / Escha VeraTechnology · DesignOutsiders · Origins
Perron, WilloStage DesignOutsiders
Philo, PhoebeFashion(Re)Sources · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Porto Rocha / Porto + RochaDesignCollaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Origins
Prince, RichardArt · Appropriation(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Reed, Jesse / OrderDesign · Publishing(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Practice · Origins
Richter, GerhardPainting(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Robertson, Chad / TartineFood(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
The Row / Olsen, Mary-Kate + AshleyFashion(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Saarinen, Karri / LinearTechnologyCollaborating · Frictions · Origins
Sato, Oki / NendoDesign · Architecture(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Frictions · Origins
Saunders, GeorgeWriting(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Seals, TréType DesignOutsiders · Origins
Simon, TarynArt · PhotographyOutsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
SnøhettaArchitecture · LandscapeCollaborating · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Toogood, FayeDesign · FurnitureFrictions · Origins
Torrisi / Major Food GroupFood(Re)Sources · Collaborating · Outsiders · Origins
Tuymans, LucPainting(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Tyler, the CreatorMusic · Fashion · MediaOutsiders · Frictions · Origins
Vally, Sumayya / CounterspaceArchitectureOutsiders
VerdyDesign · FashionCollaborating
Vo Trong NghiaArchitecture(Re)Sources · Frictions · Practice · Origins
Wales Bonner, GraceFashion(Re)Sources · Outsiders · Origins
Zumthor, PeterArchitecture(Re)Sources · Practice · Origins

Constellation

61 patterns that cross disciplines. Click a thread to pull it.

Click a pattern on the left to see who shares it.

Shared DNA

An architect in Burkina Faso and a baker in San Francisco share six patterns. A drummer who became a chef and a punk who became a runner share five. These aren't curated connections — they're the shared DNA of creative practice, surfaced through 61 constellation tags like Broke, The whale, Drums, and The wound became the method. Every line is a match. The thicker the line, the deeper the overlap.

Hover a name to highlight connections. Click to open their profile.

Architecture Fashion Design Technology Art Food Music