WORK
Oblique Strategies
The deck of cryptic instruction cards <em>Eno</em> created with painter Peter Schmidt in 1975 — drawn at random during creative paralysis, and the structural ancestor of every deliberate constraint-injection practice in the age of AI.
Oblique Strategies is a deck of black-and-white cards first published by Brian Eno and the painter Peter Schmidt in 1975, each bearing a cryptic instruction — Honor thy error as a hidden intention, Use an unacceptable color, What would your closest friend do? — to be drawn at random when a creative process stalls. The deck is the most distilled expression of Eno's lifelong conviction that competence is the enemy of the interesting, and that the practitioner needs external mechanisms to disrupt the smooth path toward adequate execution. Each card is an oblique constraint: a limitation the practitioner did not choose, designed to force unexpected territory. The deck's structural logic — that randomness, properly channeled by intention, produces outputs exceeding what intention alone could generate — anticipates by fifty years the central design problem of prompt engineering in the AI age.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Eno and Schmidt developed the deck through a process that was itself