Just a warning, I'm absolutely trashed right now. I'm proofing as much as I can but can't ensure I won't go over the top a little.
Well, that's too bad. I reckon it does fit the bill, quite blatantly. And so does Tetris.
How? Please, someone explain, explicitly, why they think a particular game fits
any definition of art. Just asserting that you think it is art without arguing in favour of it is nonsense.
For example, I don't think Portal fits the definition of art you offered, simply because Portal is not a work to be appreciated primarily for its beauty or emotional impact. You might disagree that this matters, but that is part of the definition you were using, and I'd argue it is somewhat central to that definition. If you remove that part then you are leaving an extremely broad definition of art, being any expression or application of human imagination regardless of intent or effect. Basically that would leave this post on the same level as any video game, and I don't think many people would accept that.
Art is subjective. This doesn't just apply to video games, but to ALL ART.
Art's quality and value is subjective. I've never suggested otherwise. But that doesn't mean that I should have to accept a definition of art that is utterly worthless. Saying that art is whatever anyone considers art is, to me, utterly pointless and entirely destroys the concept. Rather I want a definition which, simply, makes sense.
If the interaction of people other than the artist precludes something from being art, then that would mean a significant amount aleatory music and interactive theatre is not art.
I think you missed the point.
I've played in orchestras and string groups, and taken part in theatre sessions and plays. Those productions and performances easily qualify as artistic efforts, even if they were amateurish (I'm a poor actor and never was great on the violin). What I would question is whether the composer without an orchestra (or other means of putting his composition into sound) was truly producing art. What artistic meaning and value does an unplayed musical score have?
I've repeatedly stated that I think that the playing of a game can have artistic merit, in the same way that the acting of a script or the playing of a score can be an artistic performance. The nature of the art depends on the type of game and the player working their way through it. But the game itself is no more the performance than the script is the play. The play may contain artistic vision and lines, but I'd be hard pressed to call it art in the same way the performance of the work is.
To pretend that you know better than everyone else what isn't art is little more than pompous snobbery.
Bloody hell, I'm a physicist. I don't hold any authority on art. The whole point of engaging in this topic was to try to force knee-jerking gamers to
damn well think and actually engage in the debate that most had ignored in slamming a damned intelligent and good man who they happened to disagree with on one insignificant issue.
It's the people who jump on the bandwagon of slagging off Ebert without thinking or engaging with the subject at all who really piss me off.
I've been trying to ignore a number of comments, not all here, about his appearance and face that have been really annoying. The guy lost a section of his lower jaw to cancer and is no longer able to speak thanks to the deformation. It isn't relevant to the debate, but has been typical of the tone that has drawn me in to defend a position I don't feel strongly about otherwise.
I didn't say anything about "no value".
I don't really see any controversy here then.
I mean, all his statements suggest are that he values Shakespeare and other literary works more than video games, while acknowledging they do have value. I don't really see why this is a major problem with people. The statements seem to be in response to some of the more extreme comments he has been fielding since the original article (he tweets a lot; not having other forms of communication does that) and so are a shade hyperbolic, but not overly so. Frankly, it takes a deliberate misreading to suggest anything particularly controversial here.