Forced art and a copy of art lack expression. Expression is the key word of the definition art I found.Ieyke said:A copy of art is still art.James Elmash said:If a factory produced paintings on mass to be sold cheaply. That lacks the artistic expression that would make something art (Based on the result of googling definition of art). Then that painting wouldn't be art.Lightknight said:What kind of painting would not be art? I could see paintings being shitty art. But all art all the same. Same with literature and most other categories that fall within the defined fields of art.James Elmash said:Some games are not. Some paintings are not.
Games are generally a composition of things that are inherently art. Music, video (cutscenes), story/writing, acting, and of course all of the model and landscape designs. Some games may be missing a few but nearly all have some.
Sure, there are some games that you couldn't honestly consider art. Pong, for example, served little more than a crude purpose rather than something intended to be engaging on any artistic level. But the vast majority of games are art, even the shitty ones.
If a school child with no interest in art has to paint a given scene for school or fail, then that too would lack artistic expression.
Forced art is still art.
They're just not the original copy and possibly not GOOD art, respectively. Neither is relevant to whether they're art or not.
Expressionless or forced paintings/sculpture/games/music simply wouldn't fit the definition.
The entire question of 'are video games art' comes down to the definition of art. the one I use is the one google provides me:
"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."