Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Harper's Bazaar

How Three Very Different Works of Art Were Made

Harper's Bazaar Staff
1 min read
Photo credit: Perri Tomkiewic
Photo credit: Perri Tomkiewic

For most people, process is what you go through to get somewhere: to finish a piece of work, to arrive at a location, to achieve an outcome or a result. It’s everything that must be waded through and endured.

But the reality is that the process is where most of us spend the vast majority of our lives as we grow, strive, change, and evolve. It’s where we develop skills, build muscles, and discover who we are or want to be, and the directions in which that experience can take us are often very different from anything we ever imagined. Process is where we find our voices and hone our vision.

In the realm of creativity, process is something that’s very rarely predetermined. It’s shaped by resources, access, availability, opportunity, family, community, social structures, even geography. Making things, especially things that have value, requires time, care, and refinement. This feature is dedicated to revealing the process—and ultimately the time and care—that goes into creating the things and experiences that bring beauty and joy into our lives.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Read on for a rare look at the inner workings (and inner musings) that go into making three distinct and inordinately considered works of art: a couture look, 3-star Michelin cuisine, and an episode of prestige TV.

?

You Might Also Like

Advertisement
Advertisement