Your most salient argument would be to prove her wrong. Pick a really great game- one you feel strongely about- and write on it. My personal suggestion would be something like Bioshock.
I was very sad to read that article, as I have great respect for Roger Ebert.Xanadu84 said:Best article Ive read on the subject
http://clicknothing.typepad.com/click_nothing/2007/08/on-authorship-i.html
If it doesn't convince her, it will completely go over her head, confusing her and makjing her look like a fool.
Where did I say this? He asked why we are concerned that games are given this status, I gave a reason why. I didn't give a reason as to why they should be. Also, films are globally considered an art form. But a film is still a film. The studio (the people making it) may choose to censor it, but that's their choice. It is not the government getting in there and saying "cut this, this, and this or it doesn't get released." As it is, games are the same way. The creator chooses what to cut and what to leave, they just typically cut out enough to get the rating they want from the ESRB. It isn't the government intervening, yet.Doive said:Games wouldn't need to be censored if parents weren't such idiots and payed attention to age restrictions. Films are censored and age restricted just as much as games are. Saying "games shouldn't be censored" is not an argument for saying they are an art form.Sylveria said:We're so concerned about calling games art for a few reason but BY FAR the most important is Art is protected. The government can't censor the crap out of games if they officially and legally recognized as an art form.
I disagree. I said I child because I meant it to mean that a child has no concept of what art is and that their drawing was to entertain themself and not to create something with any meaning. They didn't finish and and think, "look, I just made art". I struggle to view things like dogs cut in half and piles of wood as art but at least they have a meaning to the artist.Sylveria said:That is a totally unfair statement. You may not consider that crayon drawing art but to that kid it is. Who's to say that kid didn't draw that stick figure cat with as much love and concern as a "real" piece of art? What sets that scribble apart from some of the masterpieces that are just a few abstract lines? Or that neo-expressionist sculpting that is just a bunch of junk (literally) welded together?Doive said:To be art something has to have some kind of artistic merit or meaning, which is why most films are not considered art and why a school child drawing their pet cat in crayon isn't art either.
Of course some games could be considered art, but on the whole they are overshadowed by games meant solely to be be played by mindless child drones, not appreciated as art.
Just because it's done poorly or not done in the fashion you dislike doesn't rob it of it's status. I don't find that hidden cryptic beauty that the Mona Lisa is said to hold but if I went to the curator and said it wasn't art he'd probably smack me in the face. Yeah for every Metal Gear there's a dozen Call of Duties that some hack studio whipped out in 3 months and dunked in coffee, but that doesn't mean they should be held to a lesser standard or drag the rest of the medium down. I can smear crap on a canvas and I'd still be totally justified in calling it art.
Um, I'm pretty sure that a group of artists and designers considered a years long project as an expression and art...Doive said:I disagree. I said I child because I meant it to mean that a child has no concept of what art is and that their drawing was to entertain themself and not to create something with any meaning. They didn't finish and and think, "look, I just made art". I struggle to view things like dogs cut in half and piles of wood as art but at least they have a meaning to the artist.Sylveria said:That is a totally unfair statement. You may not consider that crayon drawing art but to that kid it is. Who's to say that kid didn't draw that stick figure cat with as much love and concern as a "real" piece of art? What sets that scribble apart from some of the masterpieces that are just a few abstract lines? Or that neo-expressionist sculpting that is just a bunch of junk (literally) welded together?Doive said:To be art something has to have some kind of artistic merit or meaning, which is why most films are not considered art and why a school child drawing their pet cat in crayon isn't art either.
Of course some games could be considered art, but on the whole they are overshadowed by games meant solely to be be played by mindless child drones, not appreciated as art.
Just because it's done poorly or not done in the fashion you dislike doesn't rob it of it's status. I don't find that hidden cryptic beauty that the Mona Lisa is said to hold but if I went to the curator and said it wasn't art he'd probably smack me in the face. Yeah for every Metal Gear there's a dozen Call of Duties that some hack studio whipped out in 3 months and dunked in coffee, but that doesn't mean they should be held to a lesser standard or drag the rest of the medium down. I can smear crap on a canvas and I'd still be totally justified in calling it art.
You cite metal gear solid as an example but do you really believe that the designers of that game saw themselves as making art?
Do the writing on games anyway, and convince her that (some) games are art. There plenty of resources on this site to help you with the arguments.Keenanr1234 said:Just today in middle school English, we got a writing prompt about means of communication (art, music, literature) affecting peoples lives. After my teacher started to take questions I asked if video games were a form of art, and what do I get? She almost burst out laughing then said "Of course video games aren't art, thats solely a worthless technology!" I later asked if movies were considered art and she said they were. Now how aren't they art, compared to movies of course. They both have actors, plot twists, romances in some of them. That seems pretty art like to me. Is my English teacher as insane as I think she is?
Says who, exactly? Have you honestly played every game and can you honestly speak for everybody when you say those movies have merit?bahumat42 said:yeah but the artistic films (generally) are far more worthwhile than the artistic games.dathwampeer said:I'd argue the percentage of fluff to art is about even between film and game.bahumat42 said:films different because while the fluff does exist. It's recognised as fluff, and not the best the industry has to offer. I'd argue any film nominated for the real oscars (not makeup and stuff) is probably artisticly valid whereas the game industry awards game for sheer entertainment value above all else. I'm not saying games are incapable of being art, or that games haven't been art in the past, but its a shockingly small minority.dathwampeer said:How is film any different? I could probably count on my hands how many films I've watched that genuinely bring an emotion out of me.bahumat42 said:She is kinda right, most of our media is pure entertainment purposes and thus loses the emotionality (according to spell check thats a word now) of other art forms. Notice i say most, yes there are some meaningful gems in our collection but considering we only get maybe 2-3 really artistically valid games a year its fair to rule us out for now.
99% of the films that get released are also for pure entertainment value. They aren't all explorations of the human condition. Some just like shit going boom.
And aside from that your 99% figures a little iffy. Hell more than 1% of films are documentries and they sure as hell aren't going for entertainment value.
And films don't get nominated for Oscars because they're good. They get nominated based on how much arse licking the producers gave the academy.
For every 1 'Black Swan' there's 100 'Season of the witchs'. For every 1 'The void' there's a hundred 'call of duties'.
I'd say the genuine art to pulp entertainment ratio is probably about even for both. And the medium is still evolving. So whilst you're right, there is an inordinate amount of crap in the gaming world I don't think you can discount the genuine entries because of that. Just like you can't with film.
The Dark Knight (2008) // City of God (2002) // Memento (2000) // The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002) // Amelie (2001) // Spirited Away (2001) // The Lives of Others (2006) WALL·E (2008) // The Pianist (2002)//The Departed (2006)//Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004) //Requiem for a Dream (2000)//The Prestige (2006)//Pan's Labyrinth (2006) Inglourious Basterds (2009)//Up (2009) // Gran Torino (2008)///Oldboy (2003) // Gladiator (2000) // Sin City (2005) // Hotel Rwanda (2004) // Batman Begins (2005) // Slumdog Millionaire (2008) // No Country for Old Men (2007) // Snatch. (2000) //Mary and Max (2009) District 9 (2009) // Donnie Darko (2001) // Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003)
There Will Be Blood (2007) // Million Dollar Baby (2004) // The illusionist (2006) // The Hurt Locker (2009) // Moon (2009) // Billy Elliot (2000) // 28 days later (2002)
thats just what i grabbed off of imdb ffrom 2000-2009 years deleting the less worthy ones (both batman films have merit) Just by sheer number of films available the number of artistic films arre higher and even the ones which are relegated to genre films still hold merit (ala batman) the same cannot be said of games.
Art in general, not just high art is of course subjective which is partly my point. To be art, something must be viewed by someone, somewhere as art. A child can draw a picture but it won't have any meaning to them beyond colours on a page that looks vaguely like their pet. Within an hour they will have forgotten all about it and moved on to some other entertainment. I don't think that a game designer, who will work on certain aspects of a game, not the whole thing, will view that game as their artistic expression.DeathWyrmNexus said:Um, I'm pretty sure that a group of artists and designers considered a years long project as an expression and art...Doive said:I disagree. I said I child because I meant it to mean that a child has no concept of what art is and that their drawing was to entertain themself and not to create something with any meaning. They didn't finish and and think, "look, I just made art". I struggle to view things like dogs cut in half and piles of wood as art but at least they have a meaning to the artist.Sylveria said:That is a totally unfair statement. You may not consider that crayon drawing art but to that kid it is. Who's to say that kid didn't draw that stick figure cat with as much love and concern as a "real" piece of art? What sets that scribble apart from some of the masterpieces that are just a few abstract lines? Or that neo-expressionist sculpting that is just a bunch of junk (literally) welded together?Doive said:To be art something has to have some kind of artistic merit or meaning, which is why most films are not considered art and why a school child drawing their pet cat in crayon isn't art either.
Of course some games could be considered art, but on the whole they are overshadowed by games meant solely to be be played by mindless child drones, not appreciated as art.
Just because it's done poorly or not done in the fashion you dislike doesn't rob it of it's status. I don't find that hidden cryptic beauty that the Mona Lisa is said to hold but if I went to the curator and said it wasn't art he'd probably smack me in the face. Yeah for every Metal Gear there's a dozen Call of Duties that some hack studio whipped out in 3 months and dunked in coffee, but that doesn't mean they should be held to a lesser standard or drag the rest of the medium down. I can smear crap on a canvas and I'd still be totally justified in calling it art.
You cite metal gear solid as an example but do you really believe that the designers of that game saw themselves as making art?
Also, a child does have a concept of art. They might not have a definition but they know that what they are doing is an expression of an idea, which is really all art is. That picture has depth and meaning to them. Soooo your own argument disproves your thesis.
Whether or not it is "high" art, a purely vogue and subjective term, is debatable.
Art is forgotten and the child counts as "somebody." They put color and effort to paper and made an image of a creature they find dear to them. The expression and interpretation is there and they count as somebody, thus art.Doive said:Art in general, not just high art is of course subjective which is partly my point. To be art, something must be viewed by someone, somewhere as art. A child can draw a picture but it won't have any meaning to them beyond colours on a page that looks vaguely like their pet. Within an hour they will have forgotten all about it and moved on to some other entertainment. I don't think that a game designer, who will work on certain aspects of a game, not the whole thing, will view that game as their artistic expression.
Do I need to raise the cheap-ass indie games? Hell, isn't that the whole point of films and pictures anyway? You think a big film is made purely to convey a message? No. It's to make money. So that argument falls straight down.voorhees123 said:They are not art. They are made to make money only - how they look has nothing to do with it.
Your teacher is mistaken. Video games are art, it's not a "worthless technology" and you can tell her from me, an artist, that anything she has to say to refute that is an opinion born of fear and ignorance. Fear of becoming irrelevant, and ignorance because that "worthless technology" has innumerable practical applications that she is obviously completely unaware of. Perhaps she should spend a little time researching the subject material before she voices ludicrous opinions like that.Keenanr1234 said:Just today in middle school English, we got a writing prompt about means of communication (art, music, literature) affecting peoples lives. After my teacher started to take questions I asked if video games were a form of art, and what do I get? She almost burst out laughing then said "Of course video games aren't art, thats solely a worthless technology!" I later asked if movies were considered art and she said they were. Now how aren't they art, compared to movies of course. They both have actors, plot twists, romances in some of them. That seems pretty art like to me. Is my English teacher as insane as I think she is?