Jeffery Harrell wrote: No, no, no. That's not what I'm saying at all. Look, think about Jackson Pollock, 'kay? A few years ago I painted my spare bedroom, and at the end of the day the dropcloth on my floor was virtually indistinguishable from a Jackson Pollock canvas. But his is art and mine isn't. Why? Because of the intent of the person who made it. Jackson Pollock was trying very hard to make art. (I'm not educated enough to know whether it was meant to be expressive or what, but he was definitely doing it on purpose.) I just didn't want to get paint on my carpet.
It's not about skill or whatever. It's about intent. If I go into the kitchen and come out with an inedible mess, I was still cooking because I was trying to bake a cake. Get me?
But then, again, this doesn't jibe with your attempt to paint video games as inherently "not art." If someone TRIES to make a video game that invokes an emotion or aesthetic experience or sense of the sublime, then they are making art whether they "succeed" or not, correct? Just by trying?
Earlier you tried to say "a game is not art because a game is one thing and art is another," but that's nonsensical. A game is one thing and a painting is another and a sculpture is another and a movie is another. Art is a category, and you are willing to accept the last three things into that category but not the first one, and you may think you've explained why but you honestly haven't made a meaningful distinction between what that medium can offer versus the others, particularly movies, which you have said you feel are art "more often than not" (and that's farther than I would go, TBH).
Jeffery Harrell wrote:We had this great argument in class one day about what art form is the most abstract. Somebody said dance, 'cause all you have is your body, but then somebody else pointed out that dance is just sculpture in motion, and then somebody else said music because of how far removed it is from anything in nature.
Aside from songs that animals (particularly birds) sing. And the fact that music is just audible mathematics -- in that sense, it's really the most concrete.