I hope we're not to blame for this. Destructoid has a long history of hating Tale of Tales. And we have never given in -or up. And neither have they.
I think Emily Short
made a good point the other day when completely disqualifying the so-called criticism of a work of art being pretentious.
I hate the word "pretentious" in art criticism.
I understand why people use it. Often we call something pretentious when we think the artist might be concealing a lack of meaning or vision behind obscurity, jargon, or a set of conventions currently hallowed by the art establishment. It's a way of saying "I don't get this, and I don't know that there's anything to get" that shifts the blame (if blame even applies in so subjective an area as one's response to artwork) onto the artist rather than ourselves.
Two things I don't like about this approach. First, it operates from an instinct of contempt. Labeling an artist pretentious assumes the worst about someone whose motives aren't knowable.
Second, it says nothing, nothing at all, about the work itself. It's all about the artist.
So thanks to her observation, we can safely ignore most of Mr Sterling's rant.
The most eye-opening statement to me, I found in a comment by "Arianol". It goes like this:
A piece of art is supposed to convey a message or feeling to the viewer. Creators of art put a message into their work intentionally, and they either fail or succeed at getting that message across to their audience.
This is obviously a ludicrous assumption but sadly it seems to be very prevalent, especially among the computer geek crowd (that seems to consist mostly of people who believe that the world can be completely represented as problems and solutions). If, of course, you think that an art piece contains a message and then you can't find that message, you're going to get frustrated and perhaps accuse the artists of hiding that message too well, or not having put a message in the piece at all. I wonder what they think the purpose is of sending a message in an obscure form (which is basically their definition of art). If we do have a message that we can express in text, why would we make an art work? It doesn't seem to occur to them that the creation of art is a
necessity. That people create art because they know of no other way to reflect on and communicate certain ideas, notions, emotions, etc.