Creativity Comes From Constraint
The game I play [science] is a very interesting one. It’s imagination [creativity], in a tight straitjacket [constraint].
— Richard Feynman
In order to have creativity, you need structure or limitation to strain against.
The rules in F1 racing are well-defined limitations. Teams therefore often come up with creative ways to work around loopholes in the rules in order to gain an advantage.
When creativity does not stand against any kind of structure, it becomes too chaotic and is not perceived as art. This is why many people don't view random movements or scribbles as art. Creativity requires some kind of constraint.
This is analogous to balancing between chaos and order, where creativity is chaos, and constraint is order.