Isn't art supposed to be takne differently from different people? I mean as far as I'm concerened art has no real definition that defines it since everyone will view id differently.
I'm sorry, I wasn't going to bother posting in this thread but...LitleWaffle said:Besides the fact that I completely disagree with your argument, I have some examples.
Kingdom Hearts 2(Spoilers i guess?), when it was believed that goofy had died. I actually cried a bit, than felt the need for vengence.
Bioshock 1, the first bathroom, saw a shadow running by and I peed my pants(Wasn't funny at the time =P)
It doesn't have to send you to tears though, because not all art is depressing. Art can be exciting, happy, sad, or any emotion really.
If you can't tell me that you have never been excited during a games story line, than you obviously have been playing the wrong games for this whole art argument.
I can answer that: protection against censorship.ataxkt said:If art is subjective, then why do gamers seek the approval of the term from non-gamers? Interesting as the entire Ebert debate has been, I always thought that the only intelligent outcome was his admittance that he doesn't play games, and doesn't want to. Society as a whole will only accept games as an art form when enough people within it do.
Indeed. Some times, the only thing emotional about a piece of art is that it isn't. Maybe it just looks nice, or has a great soundtrack or acting.Fanboy said:Why does art always need to evoke the emotion of sadness? I didn't cry when I first saw the Mona Lisa.
Tee hee, well first time through when I was 12, yes I did. I was pretty overly imaginative back then. I had a whole plot idea planned out because of Goofy's death XD.moretimethansense said:I'm sorry, I wasn't going to bother posting in this thread but...LitleWaffle said:Besides the fact that I completely disagree with your argument, I have some examples.
Kingdom Hearts 2(Spoilers i guess?), when it was believed that goofy had died. I actually cried a bit, than felt the need for vengence.
Bioshock 1, the first bathroom, saw a shadow running by and I peed my pants(Wasn't funny at the time =P)
It doesn't have to send you to tears though, because not all art is depressing. Art can be exciting, happy, sad, or any emotion really.
If you can't tell me that you have never been excited during a games story line, than you obviously have been playing the wrong games for this whole art argument.
You actually believed, even for a second, that Goofy, THAT Goofy could be permanantly hurt by taking a rock to the head?
He gets worse than that trying to listen to music for gods sake!![]()
It used to annoy me to no end in high school that my literature teacher would automatically dismiss all science fiction as unworthy of literary analysis or of being an example of a motif. And I mean all science fiction, even Kiryl Bulychev, Daniel Keyes or Stanislaw Lem.Ewyx said:*snip*
Oh god, the Cara Mia song almost moves me to tears every time I hear it...El Poncho said:Red Dead Redemption was very emotional, didn't make me cry but if I let it I would of cried.
Portal 2 made me feel all types of emotions, especially the ending.
amen, brother. the weird thing was, i knew it would happen, i knew how he would die, i knew what he would say, but i was still so depressed.maturin said:Eli's death did it for a lot of people.
OhJohnNo said:There is no such thing as "true art". There is just art, and art is whatever you define it to be.
Sapient Pearwood said:Anything that can inspire an emotion is art.
emeraldrafael said:As long as something makes you feel, and you consider it art, its art. Others may not see it as art, but thats them.
Braedan said:Art is subjective, and if it's art to you, then it's fuckin art.
Absolutely not. This kind of thinking put forward by lazy post-modernists is what made it being a painter in the 20th and 21st Centuries a little bit crappier.lord canti said:Isn't art supposed to be takne differently from different people? I mean as far as I'm concerened art has no real definition that defines it since everyone will view id differently.
Wikipedia said:Art is the product or process of deliberately arranging items (often with symbolic significance) in a way that influences and affects one or more of the senses, emotions, and intellect.
PunkRex said:Artwork for me is one that displays the creators/subjects emotions or oppinions but GOOD artwork is one that makes others feel their own. It also needs effort, you know blood, sweat and tears.
These are not bad starting definitions either.Defense said:Art isn't meant to make you feel happy or sad, art is just meant to make you feel.
That is one and only reason I sometimes question if this whole debate shouldn't just have stopped. Having lived very close to this community for years while at college, more and more I desired to be oh so far away from those wastes of space who would rather trash-talk the artworks of the past while embelishing their own lazy and poorly thought-out attempts at art instead of trying to understand how those works how they came to be in the first place.Ewyx said:(...)to be completely honest, the art world is full of elitist assholes and pretentious academia that decides what can be considered art. The fact is, it's not how people perceive art, but what the 'elite' decides that art is.
The whole field of what is art and what is not art is decided by a few wankers who did nothing in their lives, but dedicated their life to analyzing art.
e.g. Marcel Duchamps Fountain is considered art.
e.g.2. There was once a feminist performer, that pulled out a scroll from her vagina, and read it out loud (it was some sort of feminist manifesto thing, don't quote me though), it was considered art.
The art world is SO fucked up and pretentious, do we really want to be considered a part of it?
I've know many people who were so threatened by this simple statement...Braedan said:As soon as people begin to realize art can be crappy, pointless piles of shit soaked in monkey vomit and the title of 'art' does not confer any sophistication or inherit superiority people will stop debating over whether something is 'art' or not.
I cannot truly add anything to this, so I'll just pass it forward.Blayze2k said:There's plenty of artwork that doesn't make me emotional.
Hell, I almost never get emotional looking at paintings. I just don't find anything stirring about them, in terms of emotions.
I still appreciate them as art.
No offense, but the whole premise of the OP seems pretty pretentious. The whole concept of "true" art, and the idea that art should always be one particular thing... these aren't helpful to the artistic community.
Art is something a person creates out of a desire to create rather than working towards a pragmatic purpose. That's all the definition one really needs.
[Yes, I'm aware that art often *does* serve a pragmatic purpose, but that's rarely the original intention, and even when it IS an intended result, there's generally a good deal of aesthetic or extraneous work done.]
We shouldn't limit art to one specific purpose, like evoking emotion. Yes, it's nice when something can be emotionally evocative, but sometimes I just like to be entertained, and sometimes I just like to appreciate the technical aspects of a piece.
Hear hear! \o/Xanadu84 said:I think art NEEDS to include video games. Yes, art has pretentious jackasses. Video game fandom doesn't? If more people thought about games as art, then we would get an unprecedented burst of innovation, as people from countless walks of life started to try to put game mechanics to there unique skills. We would be up to our ears in Heavy Rains, Mirrors Edges, Minecrafts and Portals. I want to see that happen.
Yup.badgersprite said:I can answer that: protection against censorship.ataxkt said:If art is subjective, then why do gamers seek the approval of the term from non-gamers?
You sir won my "wow wise up" medal of the day, congrats.DBlack said:I believe that games cant be considered art until a video game is made that can move the average person to tears. True art work is able to move someone emotionaly, and after all the years i've been playing games the only thing thats ever really moved me was when Donkey Kong went into his banana horde and saw it empty. If anyone has a good example of a moving game let me know, I'd be interested to hear if anyone has ever shead a tear over pixels.