Games AREN'T Art

Recommended Videos

nokori3byo

New member
Feb 24, 2008
267
0
0
Including a wide-open word word like "art" in such a categorical statement pretty much demolishes any hope of saying anything definitive.

A conceptual artist could put a pinball machine in a gallery and call it "art," and while you might (correctly) dismiss that as so much stupid wankery, people would still defend its merits. And what's more indicative of art than controversy?

Nope, no hard divide here.
 

Dimitriov

The end is nigh.
May 24, 2010
1,215
0
0
Macgyvercas said:
Tell me, you have artists for the backgrounds (art), musicians for the soundtrack (art), voice actors for the characters (art), programers to make the cinematics (art), and grapic designers for the cover art and additional art work (art).

All these things come together that make...not art?

I. Fucking. Call. FOUL.
Not that I don't think that games are art, but is a tour of art itself art? I mean when you go to the Louvre in Paris and walk around you are experiencing art, but the tour itself isn't art. For a game to be art, the game itself must be the artistic medium.

I do believe that there are some games that qualify, however, many do not. All games certainly contain art but that isn't the same thing as being art. For that to be the case the experience of playing the game has to evoke a sense of artistry.
 

Chefodeath

New member
Dec 31, 2009
759
0
0
Berenzen said:
The idea of 'winning' at a game is essentially non-existant anymore. Sure, there are a few games that have various scoreboards in their multiplayer facets. However, most games are told as a story that the audience takes part of. Rather than piggybacking onto the protagonists like movies and books do, a video game- or lets call them interactive experiences as that is really what they are now- makes the audience become the protagonist for the time that he or she interacts with the media. If the game happens to be an RPG or have RPG elements, then it is the audiences choices that have a major impact on the story.

Yes, games like Angry Birds are probably not an art in your own definition. With both indie and AAA games you have a plot arc that starts climaxes then concludes, and you never really 'lose' if you die, then you just reload from the last saved point and try to continue on with the story line. You don't start over, and there is an end point, unlike many arcade games of the past.
You know, thats a really interesting argument. I want to say "well no, the point is still to get to successfully get to the end of the game." but I suppose that can be argued true of literature. A story is given context in progressing from point A to point B. Still, I think theres an essential difference between a game progressing to the end and a story doing the same.
 

the spud

New member
May 2, 2011
1,408
0
0
Chefodeath said:
Games are goal oriented, the purpose is to win. Art appeals to some aesthetic which really isn't based upon this dichotomy of win/lose. Think of how bizarre the statement "I won at art meuseum!" is.
...So? Music is art, too. "I listened to some art today" is an equally bizarre statement. And just because we play games doesn't mean they can't be art. Often what you are considering to be the "game" part of the game is just another means for the artist to tell his story. Also, don't most "games are art" debates generally just boil down to definitions? By my definition, an art is just something that a crafter creates. All paintings are art, all films are art, all music is art, and all games are art. It's just that some of it is high art, and some of it is low art.
 

Owen Robertson

New member
Jul 26, 2011
545
0
0
Hal10k said:
Webster's says that art is anything that is the result of a creative effort. Going by that definition, games are art. Ergo, if games aren't art, Webster's is invalidated and "Aardvark" is now a synonym for "lightbulb".
Websters also accepts Dawg as a spelling of dog. Yay Websters?
Oxford definitions in the future, if you please.
 

Chefodeath

New member
Dec 31, 2009
759
0
0
nokori3byo said:
Including a wide-open word word like "art" in such a categorical statement pretty much demolishes any hope of saying anything definitive.

A conceptual artist could put a pinball machine in a gallery and call it "art," and while you might (correctly) dismiss that as so much stupid wankery, people would still defend its merits. And what's more indicative of art than controversy?

Nope, no hard divide here.
Well thats the entire point of having arguments about it I think. We are trying to define what we call art. In essence we are filling the definition and laying a blueprint for what we want future art to look like. Personally, I don't think the win/lose dichotomy has a place in art now and shouldn't have a place in art in the future, hence its pretty clear for me to argue against it.
 

Sean Steele

New member
Mar 30, 2010
243
0
0
There is nothing in the definition of Art that says that a game cannot be Art.

Art is defined as such.

The expression or application of human creative skill and imagination, typically in a visual form such as painting or sculpture, producing works to be appreciated primarily for their beauty or emotional power.

Are Videogames the expression of human creative skill and imagination? Check, thus videogames are art.
 

Sean Steele

New member
Mar 30, 2010
243
0
0
There is nothing in the description of Art that says that those experiencing it cannot do so with a goal no older artform had any means of external input though. As that point is left open the fact that games have a goal to them dose not disqualify it as art.
 

Chefodeath

New member
Dec 31, 2009
759
0
0
the spud said:
Chefodeath said:
Games are goal oriented, the purpose is to win. Art appeals to some aesthetic which really isn't based upon this dichotomy of win/lose. Think of how bizarre the statement "I won at art meuseum!" is.
...So? Music is art, too. "I listened to some art today" is an equally bizarre statement. And just because we play games doesn't mean they can't be art. Often what you are considering to be the "game" part of the game is just another means for the artist to tell his story. Also, don't most "games are art" debates generally just boil down to definitions? By my definition, an art is just something that a crafter creates. All paintings are art, all films are art, all music is art, and all games are art. It's just that some of it is high art, and some of it is low art.
So if art is something a crafter creates, what does that make a thoughtless scribbling or a door latch? When I make my bed, is that art? Hell, even factory machines could be considered crafters, does that make the plastic products they soullessly turn out in droves art?
 

Paragon Fury

The Loud Shadow
Jan 23, 2009
5,161
0
0
So because a game's goal isn't to be "art" but to be a "game" it cannot be art?

By simple logic you are wrong sir.

All art is not games, but all games are art.

Granted, not all games are great art, by they are art none the less. Just because their end goal isn't to be art doesn't make them not art.
 

SquirrelPants

New member
Dec 22, 2008
1,729
0
0
My opinion:
Films are considered an artform. Does the everyday shoot-em-up action film count? Nope. Does every obnoxious screamy rock song count as art? Probably not. Can things under those categories come into art? Sure!

It's subjective what counts, and 90% of it doesn't.
 

pppppppppppppppppp

New member
Jun 23, 2011
1,519
0
0
Chefodeath said:
Ya, let's try reopening this can of worms.

Its my belief that video games are by definition not art. Plenty of artistic elements certainly, and perhaps even the potential to evolve into some kind of interactive art form, but not art. The reason why video games aren't art is because they are games. Even though the purpose of both art and games are entertainment, they achieve this end through very different means. Games are goal oriented, the purpose is to win. Art appeals to some aesthetic which really isn't based upon this dichotomy of win/lose. Think of how bizarre the statement "I won at art meuseum!" is.

As I said, I believe that video games could eventually become some sort of art form, but at that point I don't think it will be proper to call them games.
Wow, I didn't realize Roger Ebert visited the Escapist...
 

BreakfastMan

Scandinavian Jawbreaker
Jul 22, 2010
4,367
0
0
You are aware of the fact that art is one of those funny, squiggly terms that mean different things to different people, right? Under your personal definition of art they might not be art, but they are under my definition. Please don't try to pass off your definition as the real one. Because it isn't, and it comes across as being intellectually dishonest, which I doubt was your intent.
 

Chefodeath

New member
Dec 31, 2009
759
0
0
Sean Steele said:
There is nothing in the definition of Art that says that a game cannot be Art.

Art is defined as such.

The expression or application of human creative skill and imagination, typically in a visual form such as painting or sculpture, producing works to be appreciated primarily for their beauty or emotional power.

Are Videogames the expression of human creative skill and imagination? Check, thus videogames are art.
Games aren't to be appreciated primarily for their beauty or emotional power though. They are to be appreciated primarily as games, as a closed system with rules that you try to win at.

And if all expressions of human imagination and creative skill are art, then there wouldn't be a point in having a word to delegate art from other creative endeavors. This post is spawned from human creativity and imagination to some extent, does that make it art?
 

Furioso

New member
Jun 16, 2009
7,981
0
0
Yea and I didn't think "The Kings Speech" was art either but everyone else thinks so
 

Chefodeath

New member
Dec 31, 2009
759
0
0
BreakfastMan said:
You are aware of the fact that art is one of those funny, squiggly terms that mean different things to different people, right? Under your personal definition of art they might not be art, but they are under my definition. Please don't try to pass off your definition as the real one. Because it isn't, and it comes across as being intellectually dishonest, which I doubt was your intent.
Its not a word with hard edges, but certainly its not entirely meaningless. It is my belief that video games are at odds with what is generally taken to be art.
 

TheRealLasor

New member
Jan 15, 2011
15
0
0
I disagree with that reasoning. All stories require conflict, and as a medium Literature and Movies are considered art, and without conflict they would have no story and thus lose almost all of what makes them considered art. A goal oriented structure is merely a way of clearly defining the conflict for the player's sake.

To get hung up on the name 'Game' is counterproductive to both your argument and the movement to create games as a viable art form. To get hung up on aesthetics such as semantics is a rather weak point. Comic Books were viably art before they gained the name 'Graphic Novels', a name change enacted only because people refused to purge an idea from their head.

However, I'd like to get to the meat of my argument, which is that the goal oriented structure of gaming is not an indication of it's lack of artistic integrity. While I'm not sure how you define art, I think that if you consider books or movies an art form, then you'll understand the importance of conflict. You'll also understand that games reach up to 10+ hours on average, thus requiring constant goal settings. The story must move on, and in a long stretching medium such as games have, with the disadvantage of not being able to rewind to turn back a few pages to remind yourself what's going on, goals must be implanted in order for the player to move the story along.

Should a clear pathway truly bother you that much, try a slightly less linear game structure. Every Day the Same Dream is a flash game that could help, or a Half-Life 2 mod, the Stanley Parable, is another good choice.
 

Sean Steele

New member
Mar 30, 2010
243
0
0
Chefodeath said:
Sean Steele said:
There is nothing in the definition of Art that says that a game cannot be Art.

Art is defined as such.

The expression or application of human creative skill and imagination, typically in a visual form such as painting or sculpture, producing works to be appreciated primarily for their beauty or emotional power.

Are Videogames the expression of human creative skill and imagination? Check, thus videogames are art.
Games aren't to be appreciated primarily for their beauty or emotional power though. They are to be appreciated primarily as games, as a closed system with rules that you try to win at.

And if all expressions of human imagination and creative skill are art, then there wouldn't be a point in having a word to delegate art from other creative endeavors. This post is spawned from human creativity and imagination to some extent, does that make it art?
In a way your post is a work of art literature is an artform after all. The point behind this is that art is a very broad term and games sit comfortably within that term.