Yeah, Tofu, don't supposed you have a higher res version of that, do you? I instantly set it as a desktop background. I just bought a TV to use as my laptop's monitor, it needs 1920x1080 files now.
I actually hate an environment where people will compliment something whatever it is. People should be free to say when something's shit when they don't like it. At the other end of the scale, constructive criticism angers me because whereas there may be a skill to art, the skill lies in your ability to express yourself, not to express what other people want. I get annoyed by criticism because the person giving the critique gives the impression that they are more skilled. The problem is that clearly Fault is very skilled indeed, which tells me that, whether or not the person providing the critique is skilled, Fault is already aware of what mistakes he's made when he's created something. I know I am when I create something.
Look, none of this is a problem for anyone else. These are my feelings. I think it wouldn't annoy me if people criticised in this thread by saying something like, "I like it, but I'd like it more if..." rather than just listing flaws; not that someone elses work necessarily has flaws, because it may have been deliberate on the part of the creator, or maybe they couldn't put the effort in.
I mean, look at . . . . . . . . .'s work. It's impossible to criticise that because it's so wierd and abstracted. You accept it, because you assume the intent of the artist was well executed. Merely because Fault's work, for instance, isn't wierd and abstracted, doesn't mean it doesn't deserve acceptance. Before you criticise, it's important to at least say whether you like it overall.
I'm 100% certain that . . . . . . . . . is autistic. It's not a bad thing, but I simply cannot imagine his art coming from anyone who doesn't have an autistic spectrum disorder.
Besides, I always imagine that DF is like cracks for autists. The fact that I love it makes me wonder sometimes if I'm an Aspie.