June 05, 2025 - 1 comments
Is Winemaking Art?
At Inserrata in Tuscany, the answer is an intuitive yes.
There’s a quiet question that hangs in the air at Inserrata, a small organic winery in the Tuscan hills: is winemaking a form of art? Not metaphorically. Not as a clever tagline. But truly, can making wine be a creative act in the same way as painting, composing, or sculpting?

Since 1997, Inserrata has embraced organic farming, blending technique with intuition throughout their winemaking process. While science and precision play a role in the cellar, much of the work relies on a deep sense of feeling, especially during fermentation and maceration. “Sometimes you just know a wine needs another day on the skins. That decision isn’t about calculation; it’s about listening.”

The winemaking process itself often begins with an image or a mood. “There are wines that feel like illustrations or photographs,” they say. “As if they’re asking for a shape, a tone, a feeling.” The visual language of wine isn’t just about what’s on the bottle, it’s embedded in how the wine is made.
Music and photography, in particular, are two influences that shape how Inserrata thinks about rhythm, timing, and presence. “Photography teaches us how to capture a moment without making it rigid,” they say. “And music, it creates emotional space around something. Winemaking, at its best, does both. It creates time, rhythm, and atmosphere that you can taste.”
Do you see winemaking as a form of art?

