RowdyRodimus said:
The bigger question is why do people care if games are considered art?
Because it's demeaning otherwise; people consider playing games to be something ridiculous, while seeing movies or paintings is a better hobby. There is really no good reason to say that an entire populace that plays games is actually doing something stupid and irrelevant and shitty in their spare time.
I believe that art cannot have a strict definition. It evolved during the course of history and it will continue to evolve after we're long dead. When people first painted the walls of the Lascaux cave, they did it for a purpose (which we can or cannot perceive); today, those paintings are considered to be an art which we value dearly. First plays were also probably just an entertaining method and if we skip a certain time frame and go to Shakespeare; he did all his plays because it was his job, not because he considered it to be an art. Eventually, that medium turned into something we now consider a true art form. It was probably the same with music and movies. In the beginning, music was a mean to invoke spirits or contact the gods, then it became entertainment for the masses and now we think of it as art. Games have existed for, what, 40-30 years? Of course people are having trouble thinking of them as art. But I see no good reason to think so.
1. They have s concept, a storyline, a motif (whatever it might be); like books, like movies, like plays
2. They have characters that carry the story and interact with each other and other objects; like books, like movies, like plays
3. They have visuals (we watch the process of advancing the storyline and interacting between characters and objects); like movies, like plays, even like paintings
4. They have dialogues and narration, blocks of text that describe certain things; like books, like movies, BUT they can also be silent, at least partially and then they can be compared to paintings.
5. They enrich our lives, in any way (we get entertainment, knowledge, interests, moral questions, simply we can consider it being pretty or calming, relaxing or good to express our frustrations or anger or happiness, etc.); just like books, music, movies, plays, paintings and pretty much EVERY art form in existence
6. The only thing "NEW" to art that we get from games is that we PARTICIPATE in it, actively. We don't just stare at them, we don't just spend two hours watching them or two days reading them; we take part in large amounts of time, we get into it and we PLAY it. So the "artist" that makes it can sit back and wait for the reception, while we, the audience, actually get all the fun. Is it because of that? It can't be art because the audience participates actively? But isn't it that recently, more and more artists are trying to make their audience participate in their art? Don't musicians love when we go to their concerts and participate in the experience? Aren't movie makers trying to get the audience to enhance the experience of a movie by making us go to the cinema? Don't we participate in a play when we go to the theatre and we clap, we gasp, we cry, we laugh? Is it because we mostly play the game alone? Can't one appreciate art when he watches the movie alone or stares at the painting alone?
I think games are not art (yet) because they are a new medium. People don't know how to look at them because they are confused, but aren't they pretty much like all art?