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they're a creative form of hand crafted human artistic expression, so yeah I don't see why they wouldn't be considered an art form, remakes and remaster honestly it depends on what you consider respectful.Do you all Consider Video Games a piece of Art that deserves Respect or do you see them just as a piece of entertainment that can be replaced and ''Improved at will'' .And do you see Remakes/Remasters as Respectful or Disrespectful to said Art ?
+1Yes, and no. Depends on the developer's purpose for the game.
Nobody is ever going to convince me Mortal Kombat Annihilation was art.+1
And in the end it's all in the eye of the beholder. Some games I look at them as just entertainment and some others not. Would one say FIFA and Fortnite are art or just plain consumer products? (I'm not giving an answer, just throwing out the thought)
Although it's interesting how, in contrast, regarding music and cinema, if one asks if those mediums are inherently art, most people would say yes, whereas videogames always spark up the debate
I would argue that Photography isn't art (nor is origami). Its a technical skill rather than a artistic skill. Art is the selective recreation of reality, based on an artists value judgements. The first part is really important, "selective recreation of reality", photography doesnt fulfill this, as its not a recreation of reality, it IS reality. Then there's origami, which doesn't communicate anything about human existence, nor does it communicate anything about an artists sense of life, and to me anyways, is a craft skill.Telling the truth is art because video games are part of the 14th art.
1st Art: The Architecture
2nd Art: The Poetry/Literature
3rd Art: The Dance
4th Art: The Music
5th Art: The Painting
6th Art: The Sculpture
7th Art: The Cinematography
8th Art: The Photography
9th Art: The Comic/Manga
10th Art: The Kitchen/Gastronomy
11th Art: The Graphic Design
12th Art: The Television
13th Art: The Advertising
14th Art: The Video Games
15th Art: The Tattoos
16th Art: The Origami
I somewhat disagree. It is in fact reality, but figuring out good angles and good lightning conditions do overlap with the subject of art. The conditions which the picture were taken is a result of the decisions and feelings from the of the photographer too, and they can extract further poetic meaning from that picture or the place they took it.I would argue that Photography isn't art (nor is origami). Its a technical skill rather than a artistic skill. Art is the selective recreation of reality, based on an artists value judgements. The first part is really important, "selective recreation of reality", photography doesnt fulfill this, as its not a recreation of reality, it IS reality.
I Understand You Zooey.I would argue that Photography isn't art (nor is origami). Its a technical skill rather than a artistic skill. Art is the selective recreation of reality, based on an artists value judgements. The first part is really important, "selective recreation of reality", photography doesnt fulfill this, as its not a recreation of reality, it IS reality. Then there's origami, which doesn't communicate anything about human existence, nor does it communicate anything about an artists sense of life, and to me anyways, is a craft skill.
Technical skill - photography, 3D printing, animation, 3D modelling (not exactly art)
Craft skill - origami, weaving, pottery, leatherworking, weaving, etc (not exactly art)
Artistic skill - painting, music, sculpture, etc. (this is art)
Games would fall into Artistic + Technical (overlap). Creating games is a Technical skill because it is trainable, involves tools, and software, but its also a Artistic skill because it involves a selective recreation of reality based on the artists value judgements (more so when its a game that communicates man's existence and sense of life, sorry Pong and Super Mario).
TLDR: Just because something looks pretty, and gets hanged on a wall, doesnt always mean its art.
Again though, its a technical skill, as photography involves lenses, lighting, film used, etc. Lighting in a photograph, is much different than lighting in a painting, as the lighting in a photograph is created by the lightbulbs used, their placement, reflectors, and diffusion panels, whereas in a painting its created by the artist's recreation of lighting.I somewhat disagree. It is in fact reality, but figuring out good angles and good lightning conditions do overlap with the subject of art. The conditions which the picture were taken is a result of the decisions and feelings from the of the photographer too, and they can extract further poetic meaning from that picture or the place they took it.
Same thing with Origami. It may be a crafting skill, but figuring out how to make it appealing in a way humans relate to can be quite artistic.
I was going to bring up how engineering a house is purely technical, but I quickly realized even that can be artistic. Many houses designs look lifeless these days but with considerate thoughts and effort you can design a house with personality that brings good feelings to you.
Hell, I'm a hobbyist game programmer and I consider programming to be art. Simply because it's fascinating and having endless possibilities gives you room to be expressive. Even on something purely technical.
Maybe I'm pushing the definition too far, but I do believe the full extent of what is art goes beyond the practical definition that we usually attribute it to.
Counter argument:I swear someone asked a question like this before but imma pull up some art in the form of a monologue that totally wasn’t a result of being salty the game was shit:
View attachment 65321
This.Yes, and no. Depends on the developer's purpose for the game.
Agreed, most, but not all. For example i wouldnt consider Sudoku games on the PSP to be art, or at least, not in the same realm as RDR2 or Cyberpunk.This.
Most games are developed as simple entertainment products but there are many that can be considered works of art.
While yes, games can be consumed purely as an activity, in a lot of cases games made me feel something more... such as the sense of wonder, or feeling immersed on it, or admiring the whole thing as some sort of interactive play and wondering what was the creative process behind it. And I'm not necessarily talking about deeper or more complex games, I felt this sort of stuff even with old ass Atari games!I don't think they can be art. Don't get me wrong: it's not that I consider them to be inferior than other human artifacts, it's just that they do something different. Aristotle made a relevant distinction between primary arts and secondary ones, and that distinction can be seen in, for example, eroticism and pornography: the first one implies contemplation, while the second one... Well, you now what happens: it makes you want to participate. And that applies to videogames: they don't favour contemplation nor any inner exploration: we lost ourselves inside them, and they take control.
and that distinction can be seen in, for example, eroticism and pornography: the first one implies contemplation, while the second one... Well, you now what happens: it makes you want to participate.