Games AREN'T Art

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nokori3byo

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Chefodeath said:
Personally, I don't think the win/lose dichotomy has a place in art.
No? Ever hear of a little thing called "The Art of War"? How about "martial arts"? Art works themselves are routinely given awards that designate them as more worthy than other works in the same medium. Elsewhere, artists compete for grant money to keep their careers alive. Western dramatic art as we know it began with hotly contested competitions between the tragic poets at the Festival of Dionysis in Athens and when a major player like Eurypides failed to win, it was big news. In medieval Iceland, competitions between bards reciting satirical poetry were sometimes used to settle otherwise bloody feuds between rival families. Lastly, the zero sum game of public debate is both a clear derivative of rhetorical art and a major determining factor in world history.

The idea of winning is in no way alien to art.
 

Cain_Zeros

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Michael Bay movies and shitty knock-offs like Snakes on a Train are technically art, because film is an accepted art form. If that shit's art, games damn well better be.
 

Tselis

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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".
I agree with this logic. ^^
 

loc978

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Sorry, but there is a concrete definition for art in this context. It is as follows:
4a : the conscious use of skill and creative imagination especially in the production of aesthetic objects; also : works so produced [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/art?show=1&t=1317616719]
So yes, even ET for the Atari 2600 is art (even if you merely count the physical cartridge). Whether or not art is good, bad, popular or unknown has no bearing on defining it as art.

**edit**
*looks up*
hmm... ninja'd, sort of...
 

Sean951

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Thamous said:
Why does it matter if they're art?
I feel like gamers as a whole are so dead set on getting their favorite passed time classified and accepted as an "art" so they can justify their enjoyment of it.
Why? Stop giving a shit what other people think and just enjoy what you enjoy.
It's not to justify what we enjoy, it's to protect what we enjoy and guarantee that they enjoy the freedom of speech other forms of art enjoy.
 

kouriichi

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"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."

By definition, videogames are art.
Besides, no painting has ever made me cry. When Aerith was killed in FF7, i was shocked, sad and almost teared up.

No painting has ever made me stand and cheer like i did in Jade Empire when
You could enslave your team by binding their souls to their bodies so they had to follow your every command till the day you die. I mean, come on! How friggan awesome was that decision!?!?

Videogames are more art then entertainment. Look at all the artists it takes to produce a single game. Graphic designers, script writers, musicians! And thats just the tip of the iceberg!

The purpose of art is to invoke emotions. The simple fact people are willing to defend videogames with such passion even proves that point!
 

Something Amyss

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Dec 3, 2008
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emeraldrafael said:
So if a game is not goal oriented then its art?
Which is silly, because we have other art with direction.

It does seem to be the gist here, though. The "Games Aren't Art" argument has always struck me as similar to a line from a George Carlin routine, where he discounts gymnastics as a sport because it's "something Romanians are good at."

Except, being George Carlin, it was a joke.

This is like saying "Music isn't art because you can also dance to it."

Chefodeath said:
Think of how bizarre the statement "I won at art meuseum!" is.
Funny, I "Won" at All-State in the local Jazz Band at my High School. Well, we won. It's hard to say "I" when it was a team effort. There were also choiral groups, orchestral groups, jazz singers, and so on and so forth.

In fact, there are a lot of ways art can be competitive. Especially since a lot of art can be performed. It's a little harder to justify "winning" at painting, but not all art has to meet every criteria for it to be valid.

And honestly, I don't mind retreading an old topic if there's new thought, but this is pretty much old thought with an arbitrary exclusion.
 

loc978

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Sean951 said:
Thamous said:
Why does it matter if they're art?
I feel like gamers as a whole are so dead set on getting their favorite passed time classified and accepted as an "art" so they can justify their enjoyment of it.
Why? Stop giving a shit what other people think and just enjoy what you enjoy.
It's not to justify what we enjoy, it's to protect what we enjoy and guarantee that they enjoy the freedom of speech other forms of art enjoy.
Maybe I'm just hung up on semantics here, but that's a completely different issue, at least according to the wording of the opening post here.

"Art" as defined within the English language is very different from "protected art forms" as defined by law in any given place. It may be that's what the OP was referring to, but if so, their post was poorly worded.
 

maxmanrules

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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.
Seconded! Bravo good sir!
 

FrankWilliams

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Sep 28, 2011
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I almost agree with some of the stuff you say. Minecraft is more of a tool to make art not art itself. As for games being made of art, well boardgames often are made of art, but not considered art. My monoploy board has a picture on it (art) but is just a game.

However, as a counterpoint, many chess games are made to be art. I seen a shiny chessboard/pieces set out as a display. So there's an example of a game being art. Why can't videogames be art?

Not that it matters, since art is in the eye of the beholder and if you screw with a beholder they will hit you with disintegrate.

Not related: An easy way to win minecraft. Dig down three blocks, place one above your head. I would call that winning, but readily admit it is boring and pointless.
 

Chefodeath

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nokori3byo said:
Chefodeath said:
Personally, I don't think the win/lose dichotomy has a place in art.
No? Ever hear of a little thing called "The Art of War"? How about "martial arts"? Art works themselves are routinely given awards that designate them as more worthy than other works in the same medium. Elsewhere, artists compete for grant money to keep their careers alive. Western dramatic art as we know it began with hotly contested competitions between the tragic poets at the Festival of Dionysis in Athens and when a major player like Eurypides failed to win, it was big news. In medieval Iceland, competitions between bards reciting satirical poetry were sometimes used to settle otherwise bloody feuds between rival families. Lastly, the zero sum game of public debate is both a clear derivative of rhetorical art and a major determining factor in world history.

The idea of winning is in no way alien to art.
That's a sophomoric mistake. When the word art is used in the context of the martial arts or the art of war, it uses the word in a older sense, more like a craft.

As far as the contests concerning art are considered, those are measures of the artist's skills to make an appealing piece of art. They do not infest the actual medium.
 

the spud

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Chefodeath said:
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?
Allow me to clarify. I probably could have worded that better. I said that all these "games are art" debates generally just boil down to definitions. What "art" generally came to be defined as was something that a creator creates that appeals to the senses. That definition came about sometime in the 1500s or so, and before that and "artist" was just a person who had a skill. In that way, all things created by a creator or creators that appeal to the senses are art. It is just that some of it is good art, while some of it is bad. Transformers 2 is art just the same as Citizen Kane, it is just that Citizen Kane is high art, while Transformers 2 is low art. Lets try to apply this to video games.

Chrono Trigger=High art

Portal=High art

Ninjabread Man=Low art

Sorry about the confusion.
 

r0kle0nZ

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Apr 2, 2011
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All Art is subjective, so in my own opinion what you call art could not be art. What I call art could not be art, yet everyone fights about it.

So in theory, sit down, shut up, and enjoy the show.

Oh and my Opinion, whatever MIGHT be considered art is Art, because it will mean something to someone in some way shape or form. No one can dictate what is and what isn't. Just not how it's supposed to be.
 

drummond13

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By your definition of art, they aren't.

By my definition of art, they are, though currently a rather avant garde branch of art.

Nobody's going to your mind about this because your definition is set. There's nothing wrong with this: we all have our own personal feelings on what "art" is. But there's absolutely no point in debating the matter because we're each holding games to a totally different interpretation of the word "art". I don't see how the concept of winning and losing suddenly makes games any less an art form than movies but hey, as I said, that's based on my definition not yours.
 

Thaius

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Mar 5, 2008
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Ugh. If I can be completely frank, I'm tired of this old and entirely meritless argument.

Essentially, what you are saying is that if you took the gameplay out of a game, it would be art. That a game has artistic elements (which essentially amount to film if you take the gameplay out), but since there is gameplay video games are not art. You're saying games and art cannot coexist. This makes no sense.

Do not mistake this fact; the point of modern video games is to have a complete experience, not to "win." Failure gives you an immediate option to retry; even if some progress is lost, you are placed in a situation allowing you to continue on, because video games are not about overcoming challenges for the sake of "winning," they are about overcoming challenges for the sake of experiencing the entire artwork.

Even then, what do you do with things like the story choices of Mass Effect or Heavy Rain, or moments like the end of Shadow of the Colossus or the plot twist in Bioshock? Moments that completely throw aside the goal of "winning" for the sake of emotional impact based on interactivity?

Fact is, you're saying that "art" plus "game" equals "game." Could it be possible that this medium is something between the two, a game that is also art, an artwork experienced through a game? What about this combination disqualifies it from being art? To argue that video games aren't art because they're "games" is arguing semantics on a level no worse than saying a "motion picture" isn't a storytelling art because it's just a moving picture.
 

Chefodeath

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drummond13 said:
By your definition of art, they aren't.

By my definition of art, they are, though currently a rather avant garde branch of art.

Nobody's going to your mind about this because your definition is set. There's nothing wrong with this: we all have our own personal feelings on what "art" is. But there's absolutely no point in debating the matter because we're each holding games to a totally different interpretation of the word "art". I don't see how the concept of winning and losing suddenly makes games any less an art form than movies but hey, as I said, that's based on my definition not yours.
As much as I respect you respecting my opinion, the entire point of me opening up this thread is for you to try and convince me otherwise. A good definition will include all the commonly viewed paradigm examples of that category; No one would try to create a definition of science that didn't include biology or chemistry. I want you to tell me what makes video games such a paradigm example of art that not including them in my definition would be foolish.
 

Infernai

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Look, as everyone has explained, art is subjective meaning what we believe to be art may not be art to someone else. To me, i think games are as much art as books, films, and drawings. So, by all means, i feel free to classify them as art.

Officer Crayon said:
Don't feed the trolls
Unless of-course you laced the food with Cyanide first, then by all means feed them.