What a terrible question.
Even worse is the question "which video games are art?" For whatever reason, people think that art is a compliment, and only some games
achieve the status of art. Ergo, someone could claim that Zelda is "art" but
Charlie's Angels is not, because one is successful (in terms of quality, not commerce) and the other isn't.
I understand the question, I really do. We call things "artful" which is apparently a compliment. And we believe there are such a thing as skilled "artisans" who create things with their hands. And the definition of what art actually entails is very difficult too. Here's some broad definitions I want to throw down, from Dictionary.com (which references multiple dictionaries). Please note that I had to pick and choose since the word has many, many definitions.
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the class of objects subject to aesthetic criteria
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Human effort to imitate, supplement, alter, or counteract the work of nature.
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The conscious production or arrangement of sounds, colors, forms, movements, or other elements in a manner that affects the sense of beauty, specifically the production of the beautiful in a graphic or plastic medium.
When most people say "I believe that this is art," they are really meaning that they believe it is "artful." A secondary definition of the word art is this:
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High quality of conception or execution, as found in works of beauty; aesthetic value.
If something has art in it, it is beautiful or of high quality. But if something actually
is art, then it is part of "the class of objects subject to aesthetic criteria." There's a difference.
So I don't really have much of a problem when someone says "this is art," because I know they mean it is of higher quality than something else, even if they're saying it wrong. But when someone says "this isn't art," they're not just saying that it is "artless." They're demanding that the thing (be it a game or a movie) not be classified as art at all, and not be treated in the same field as other works that are "more valid." They're actually saying that discourse about this title be relegated to another area, that if we consider it "art" we have made a statement of endorsement and we cannot intellectually discuss its merits (or demerits).
This is an epidemic! All video games are art. I posit this statement as a fact, and I hope that it won't engender a giant discussion. Of course it will, and I probably won't dive too far into the ensuing rabble for fear of being argumentative and controversial. Let me just say that once we recognize that video games are of "the class of objects subject to aesthetic criteria," then we know that we must always criticize them as works of art, meaning how they sound, what they look like, and how it feels (via the controller) to play them. All video games are made up of a combination of those three: sight, sound, touch.
The primary art of gaming, though, is control: what do I get to do, and what don't I? When do I get to do it? What are the effects (usually visual or auditory) of my actions? How does it feel to do the actions physically with a controller?
So yes, Superman 64 is art. It's not a compliment! There is such a thing as bad art. If you say a film is art, you're just stating the obvious. Let's move past the idea that some things are art and some things aren't, otherwise we will be mired in subjectivity and individualistic responses like "this is art to me," and "I feel like this isn't art."
Relativism destroys nations, and right now our culture is being torn down from the inside. Art is one of the many things that is being destroyed by subjective response. In fact, with art, we've gone beyond subjective response and into subjective identification! So my
opinion is that something is art, and no one can change that since it's my
opinion.
Raph Koster (who's fairly famous) added fuel to this fire back in February, and I responded with a
blog. The blog includes links back to Raph's original post, about a video game called High Delivery that was very "artful," and is definitely "art." Raph asked "is this art?" Most of the responses were "it's art to me!" And then Joystiq posted the most idiotic thing I have ever read on the Internet. Please read the post for links to that as well.
Well I'm sure I was too harsh and inflammatory with this post. Please know that I'm not trying to be a jerk, but that this is a problem that will forever set back games criticism and scholarship. If we don't agree, right now as a community, that games are art, then we will never hold our own against the other major art forms. If we wait for judges to decide for us whether our favorite medium is art or not, we'll be
very dissatisfied with the answer they give us.