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Published: 2014-09-04 17:00:07 +0000 UTC; Views: 28734; Favourites: 186; Downloads: 0
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The recent shitstorm that hit the gaming industry, and after that pretty much the entire internet after that, has left me a bit frightened to be honest.
[[ For those that spend the last weeks under a rock, go watch this  and read that  to view both sites of the matter and form your own opinion -- I'm not gonna do that for you ]]

Of course, we all knew that the internet could be a very nasty place. It has been a nasty place before and pretty much every single one of us knew that there places out there that are better be avoided when you're a sensitive person (or a normal human being with feelings -- however you want to call it). What the recent issue confronted us with, however, that as artists we aren't safe either. I can remember the earlier internet raids. The victims were either big organisations (Paypal, Scientology, etc) or idiots that actually did something that would probably get them into jail like torturing or murdering animals. While the consequences were often incredibly hash, it somehow still felt justified. Because, be honest; everybody wishes animal torturers the worst.

The recent examples were people like Zoe Quinn and Phil Fish. Two independent artists whose behavior got them on the bad side of the public opinion. Apparently bad enough to have their info doxxed , and rumors said they had to go undercover for a while to wait for the shitstorm to pass over. While I would be the last one to say their behavior is acceptable, and they wouldn't be people I'd like to hang out with... they haven't actually done anything so bad to justify this. They haven't killed anyone. They haven't tortured animals. They haven't done anything that's worthy of a place in jail. They're just not being liked by the general public.
And that's what concerns me. Because if that's what possible when people "don't like you". Where is the limit?

Being an independent artistThe indie title that many of those game artist were is basically nothing more that a sign to show that they're independent. Unaffiliated with a big company. In that sense, most of us are indie. We're working on our own art, our own styles, and doing our own commissions and prints. We're doing our own thing. 
Being independent mostly means that we don't have people doing our PR for us. We do our own communication and answer our own messages/inboxes for these simple reasons;
Money
Artistic integrity
While the first is pretty obvious (starving artist meme, anyone?), the latter is often a personal choice by many artist. If you got another person to answer your messages, how much "you" will be left in your communication? Will it still be as personal as you intended? As art is a personal matter for many artist, this often is a deal for many single artist, hence they choose to answer their messages themselves.

All in all, this makes how the public thinks of you be heavily influenced by two things;
How experienced are you in handling PR?
How much of a likable person are you anyway?
Artists being experienced with PR, marketing... or anything else than art... are usually rare. I'm not saying it doesn't happen. But the more creative people are, the more they steer on emotion (and less on logic). Some have experience in PR by having worked in part time jobs. Most haven't. Which leaves us to the second; how much of a likable person are you? And this all comes down to the good old thing that we already experienced in school. That some people were just liked a little bit more than others for reasons most of us were unable to comprehend. 

The thing with critiqueThe most heard argument for why people dislike an artist on the internet is that that "this person doesn't handle critique well".
Either meaning;
The artist reacts fiercely to critique
The artist ignores/blocks critique
The artist doesn't improve fast enough, leading the audience to think he doesn't do anything with given critiques

I've thought long and hard about it, having had my own various experiences with critique. And up until today I'm not sure what it means to be able to handle critique well, since I'm pretty sure once you passed a certain point, you just can't do it right and people will judge you harshly because you have exposure and people somehow want to see it justified.

First of all there's a difference between critique and bashing.
Giving a person a critique means you have at least the intention of helping this person forward in his artistic career. "I think this is a great portrait, but the lighting on the nose is somewhat off" makes a simple but still good critique. It would be even better with a suggestion on how to improve it. But at least the artist now has a clue on what is off and what might need a bit of fixing. A comment like "your artwork sucks" is nothing more than burning a person down. Although to most people this difference is (hopefully) obvious, there's a large group of people that thinks anything is justified in the name of critique. And the more exposure a person gets on the internet, apparently the more it is 'justified' to make these kinds of remarks about this persons art. Because "if a person is that popular, he should be able to handle it"? 

To be honest, I've never quite understood this flaw in logic.
The point is that popularity is a thing artists don't call onto their selves. It's decided by their public so it's outside their own influence. So how exactly should this whole justification thing work then?

Should it be considered normal that people are getting death threats and are wished the worst, just because they happen to have many fans? Because if that is the case, I'd like to know exactly how many fans does it take to rule out the human emotions of a such person? 

In the end, critique is nothing but a helpful tool for an artist. Some people will use it to their advantage. Some will not. But no matter how you twist or turn words or views, an artist has no real obligation to put that critique to use. After all; the people on the internet are nothing but an audience. Expectations from people on the internet are often limitless and unreasonable. Can you really blame an artist for not being a role model when all he wanted to do is just make art? -- That seems to be the real question.

Change vs personalityThe thing that immediately comes with critique, is change.
If your audience says they don't like something about your attitude, you can always change it. And of course we all change, get older (and hopefully wiser) over the years, and toughen up a bit.

It becomes different matter when people say they don't like our art. And leaves us with multiple questions;
Where do we draw the line between "improvement" and "style"?
Wasn't that art the thing that got us well known in the first place?
Is there still a sense of "self" in adapting to the environment like a chameleon?

Censorship vs protectionAnd with removing comments (critiques) there's of course always the issue of censorship. Because when is something censorship and when is it not? The recent issue with Zoe Quin might've been the prime example of damage control and censorship, going as far as contacting moderators on other forums to get certain messages and comments taken offline. But in a lot of other cases the issue is a lot less black and white.

On DeviantArt every person is given the power to moderate the comments on his journals and artworks. I too have used this power in the past to remove comments that I found unsuitable (mostly foul language and swearing). I've explained in my recent journal about white knights , I've also purposefully removed people revealing names of 'haters'. Censorship? Maybe. But I don't want to be the one responsible when a few thousand angry fans go to the page of such a person to do god-knows-what kind of damage.

DiscussionThe reason why I brought this topic up is not because I wanted to discuss the recent issue involving the state of the gaming industry or Zoe Quinn. DeviantArt has already various topics on that so if you want to discuss that issue, I'd advice you to go there . What I wanted to know is how this recent issue influenced your thoughts about your art and the public opinion.

Do you think it's it's important to maintain a good public image?
Do you have people to help you handle hard PR related issues, or do you handle everything yourself?
How do you handle critique?
Do you think some artists receive an unreasonable amount of critique? (and does that make it reasonable they lash out sometimes?)

I'm looking forward to hear your opinion on the subject  

Related content
Comments: 361

aliewren In reply to ??? [2014-09-06 12:05:15 +0000 UTC]

true

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neonparrot In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 08:32:58 +0000 UTC]

- Do you think it's it's important to maintain a good public image?
Depends on what you want. It's important if you're aiming for popularity, but if you're only doing art for yourself, it's not necessary. But it's important that most of people who claim to not care about opinions of other people are lying.

- Do you have people to help you handle hard PR related issues, or do you handle everything yourself?
I have 120 watchers or so, there's no need for help at all.

- How do you handle critique?
It depends. I don't like when people force critique when I don't ask for it. Yes, I want to improve, yes, I don't know all my mistakes, but there are drawings I worked hard on, and drawings I did being more or less careless. And, in my opinion, critique is only necessary when you worked hard and did your best. In this case, all mistakes were most likely caused by lack of knowledge and people pointing them out and telling how to fix them are helping you a lot. But when you did art without thinking and just for fun, critique won't help, but only irritate you. There are plenty of mistakes, but you could do better and you know that this or that can be fixed in this or that way. If someone tells you about it it'd be "hey, 2+2=4, did you know about it??? hope it helps"

Also, sometimes people who write critiques are lacking knowledge themselves and they don't understand what they write about. In this case it's also not very appreciated. And I don't like the "teacher's" way of writing, when the commenter is being too serious and mature, but that's just a personal preference.

- Do you think some artists receive an unreasonable amount of critique? (and does that make it reasonable they lash out sometimes?)
Y E S. Most of reasons are listed above. There's also a chance that artist doesn't want to improve and treats his\her hobby as a fun game\way to relax and critique make it similar to another work, when it was meant to be a rest. Artists can be satisfied with their skill level, and it's good, not bad. I've seen critiques for really gorgeous pieces of art that looked like "Everything is great, but her third eyelash in the right eye is a bit off". Yes, that's definitely so important and will help artist improve a lot!

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DamaiMikaz In reply to neonparrot [2014-09-05 08:48:49 +0000 UTC]

I've never quite understood the attitude from artists that said they hated on critique or comments and did art for their own enjoyment alone, but still posted it on the internet?
I mean; if you don't care for popularity, or don't even care to be seen... why would you post your work on such a hostile place as the internet then?

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neonparrot In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 09:12:47 +0000 UTC]

To make friends and share art with others! Sharing art with others doesn't mean wanting thousands of fans screaming how awesome you are. I wouldn't mind being more popular myself and won't hide it, but I can understand people who want to be sociable, see art of others, share different ideas, maybe joining some fandoms without caring about amount of views per a work.

Besides, those people usually don't promote much and submit art in smaller groups or don't submit it in groups/forums/whatever at all.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to neonparrot [2014-09-05 09:19:47 +0000 UTC]

But wouldn't it be more suitable and more comfortable to find a smaller website then?
I can remember that during my childhood I felt more in place in smaller community's with lesser people because they were often a lot friendlier ^^

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neonparrot In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 09:27:03 +0000 UTC]

Maybe. Some people do that. But on this website you also won't be noticed if you don't work for it so ones wanting a small audience can easily get it.
Haha, it's like village vs big city.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to neonparrot [2014-09-05 09:31:02 +0000 UTC]

I dunno.
I can remember not even being able to get a small audience back in the days.
It frustrated me like hell T__T

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Darksh1ne In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 08:12:23 +0000 UTC]

Seriously when the whole thing about Zoe Quinn only started long ago i already knew something was unclear here. In the internet it's extremely easy to bully or troll someone, but it's equally as easy to avoid it and to ignore it. You don't see those people, you don't know them, you should not care.
Seeing how Zoey reacted to that "harrasing" back then, how loud and histerical she was, with threats to cancell her game project I already knew she was after the fame and attention, and not for truth. Was it her own idea to troll herself or was it a real troll? It doesn't matter a single bit. it's not the reason why she is not welcome anymore, it's because of the affairs with journalists and the manipulations of public opinion.

While you say this: 
"While I would be the last one to say their behavior is acceptable, and they wouldn't be people I'd like to hang out with... they haven't actually done anything so bad to justify this. They haven't killed anyone. They haven't tortured animals. They haven't done anything that's worthy of a place in jail. They're just not being liked by the general public."

I agree, that doesn't make them worthy for jail, but it also is a terrible thing to do. People hate lies. People hate hypocricy. And in Zoe Quinn case we got both at the same time. it's all harmless when it's about creating games but such behaviour model can easily spread to other areas of seciety, for example politics. And then we get what we have in ukraine for example, where we have Western seciety use double standards. Talking about democracy and will of people about those who capture weapons and take over government with force. That's just a tiny example from the sea of them.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to Darksh1ne [2014-09-05 08:52:27 +0000 UTC]

But you have to admit this happened on a far smaller scale?
I mean; who did really get duped by this girl? As far as I know she ruined a game event and she cheated on her boyfriend. While both of them are really wrong in the sense of morals, 99% of the internet that is angry with her, wasn't personally duped by her. This is very different when you compare this with a government, that  is responsible for thousands of people.

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SunsetSprite In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 07:41:12 +0000 UTC]

Do you think it's it's important to maintain a good public image?
It is. But it's also improtant for people to like you for who you are and what you are.
Do you have people to help you handle hard PR related issues, or do you handle everything yourself?
Ah. It actually varies. Most of the time I handle it myself though.
How do you handle critique?
Honestly, I accept it. They're being honest in what they are saying, (even if they are a little rude), only to help you out. I accept it and try to fix it. 
However, if they're just bashing your art then no. No I don't accept that. 
Do you think some artists receive an unreasonable amount of critique?
Look. People are only trying to help the person out. If the person if receiving loads of critiques, then the internet wants them to get better. Therefore, they give them critiques. 

Geeze. People just gotta accept things.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to SunsetSprite [2014-09-05 08:54:12 +0000 UTC]

> Look. People are only trying to help the person out. If the person if receiving loads of critiques, then the internet wants them to get better
I don't always think that's the case. Sites like encyclopedia dramatica have many 'hate articles' on artists that are indeed full of 'critique' but not with the slightest intention to help them. 

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SunsetSprite In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-06 04:56:27 +0000 UTC]

True. But I meant when they are actually trying to help the person out. 

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DamaiMikaz In reply to SunsetSprite [2014-09-06 08:29:52 +0000 UTC]

When they do, it's often notable from the way they comments.
Or at least; that's my experience

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SunsetSprite In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-07 07:50:18 +0000 UTC]

Now that I think about it, it is true.

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ElementChaosTwister In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 07:38:57 +0000 UTC]

I don't think it really matters anymore about having a public image on the internet anymore. As Byassu said, you are who you are no matter how much or how determined one is to hide/expose it. With the the younger generations growing up on the internet, it has and will continue to be a slew of general disrespect, ignorance, and a breeding ground for hatred. Some kids and adults believe that by hiding behind and avatar or some random gamertag they can do and say whatever they please. Take Justin Carter, as an example. He played League of Legends and was arrested and sent to jail for making terrorists threats. He is out on bail and awaiting trial. If convicted, he will serve two ten year sentences in prison. PCGamer could not have summed it up better. "Whether this is an overreaction on the authorities' part or not, it's worth being mindful that what you say online, even in the escapist haven of video games, could quite possibly come back to hurt you." 

The same goes for other media sources such as Facebook, YouTube, DeviantArt. Many people do not think before they act or say something and many are not prepared to face the repercussions that may or may not ensue. 

www.pcgamer.com/2013/07/12/lea…

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DamaiMikaz In reply to ElementChaosTwister [2014-09-05 09:21:19 +0000 UTC]

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Makuro-Of-ShaDow In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 07:35:55 +0000 UTC]

My 2 cents :3
-Yeah public image is always important in public forums like deviantart. I know I do my best to appeal to the wider community, so I can get my art out and see more of dA. Your public image can even be an artwork, look at Andy Warhol for example. However in any media situation, especially with the internet, once your name is out there, or once you enter a large open forum online, your at the mercy of whoever comments on your stuff, which can be good or bad, depends on the level of age, envy, or dislike your audience holds.
-Im pretty regular on my dA, and I dont exactly have an uncontrollable fan-base/watchlist, so its easy enough for me to sort out any PR based stuff. And I dont think that will ever change, even if I get a larger demographic of watchers/watchees, as I feel the same as DamaiMikaz, this account is way to personal for me to let someone else manage my PR.
-Personally, I love critique, as I know I always will be improving, and critique can focus my improvement on the stuff that needs improvement Im usually the one giving critique to others, because of the same outlook really. But I always comment on the stuff the person has done well, as opposed to just the improvement. Once the deviant knows your not being hostile, they'll be more likely to react well to critque :3 and for the spam or trolls, either they hate your artwork or they're looking for a volatile reaction, in which case they'll probably never appreciate my work, so I therefore dont need to worry about what they say. Not everyone's gonna like me or my work, and I'd rather spend my time talking to the deviants who do
- Like I said before, the more popular you get, the more envious people get, and the more people will know about you, which may attract those adolescent bridge-dwellers. I'd say if the hate is restricted to one forum(spam in dA for example) then it is manageable. It totally makes sense however if the entire internet is bitching about you, and you lash out. Especially deaththreats and the like. For the sake of the length of this comment, ill stop there :3

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Byassu In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 07:04:56 +0000 UTC]

 Thing is.. There is no such thing as Public Image in the internet. It`s what I learned over time it doesn`t matter if it`s games, forums, social media or general internet - you are what you are. If you are an ass in the real life, you are being an ass on the internet too. Even if you try to hide your true self,you might manage to keep that image, however one day situation will come and all your "gold" will leak out into public. Its only a matter of time.
  Second thing why I think this is happening is because well.. people are loosing major virtues. Honor, equity, understanding, respect and general intelligence is declining. And because of that...well we have battalions of White Knights over the internet. People should think before they talk or do things...this apply for everything...comments, critique, general chatting. I have this site where I am a  featured artist because of my comic, and they put my works out on social media to do some promotion for me... so there I have another thing - I need to think before I draw, because everything I put out into the open is seen by others..so if I involve some "bad material" drawing or commentary, it can`t get ugly for me.
 I`m the person who used to handle critique in worst possible way - counterattack the most viscous and cruel way I could think of. but I learned my lesions- the less you react to comments outside the best it is. If i receive some bashing, I usually handle it politely with proper manners ( its been some time I had to handle that though) DD there is nothing better than a good tact to handle someone who is raging or trying to insult you. This thick skin saved me several times already and i`m very glad to see there are some other people who react same way...cold politeness cuts like a hot knife.

cheers ~ on the off topic notice: How are you? D

 

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DamaiMikaz In reply to Byassu [2014-09-05 09:30:08 +0000 UTC]

I don't think the actual intelligence of people is declining. I think it appears this way because

1. The people on the internet get younger
2. The internet is easier to use

Back in my day, I had to share a computer with 4 family members. I had only limited time online. I was 15 before we got an internet connection at home (or 14... can't remember) and the first time my mom watched me constantly to make sure I didn't do anything bad online. Nowadays kids from 7 years old are online without supervision. They don't have the capacity to see the consequences of what they're doing. Their brain isn't that far developed yet (note; this is proven by science). So yeah, it's logical the internet landscape changes.

Another fact is that the internet is easier to use. Back in the day computers were generally hard to use. They crashed a lot. They were expensive. So basically the only people that could use them were people with above average IQ's and above average income (which often goes together, because better education goes with better incomes). Nowadays every moron has a computer, smartphone, tablet... and whatnot. And every moron knows how to use it. It doesn't take any coding or whatsoever to post your shit on the internet (back in the days, it did) so yeah... that contributes as well.

All in all... the average IQ of humanity didn't drop.
But I bet the average IQ of the internet user did drop quite significantly over the last 10 years. 

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Byassu In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 14:55:02 +0000 UTC]

well then I hope you are right on this.

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Sascha90 In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 07:03:03 +0000 UTC]

-Yes, it is important to have a good public image. 
- The only people I have on-hand to assist with PR is my bf and my sister. However, most of the time, I'm on my own with handling things. 
- I am entirely capable of handling critique politely, mainly due to attending art classes where having our artwork critiqued is an important part of our grade. 
- No, and for most artists to lash out on critiques they receive means they are not listening to advice that they possibly need. I mean, when/if they get work at an animation studio or graphic design department, critiques will be commonplace, and if they react the way they do here, they may end up fired.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to Sascha90 [2014-09-05 07:23:47 +0000 UTC]

Did art class explicitly teach you how to deal with critique, or did the many (sometimes harsh) critics toughen you up?
And how you deal with the "your art sucks" stuff, which isn't practically critique

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Sascha90 In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-06 07:53:55 +0000 UTC]

It was one experience with my first instructor in college that led to me toughening up. As for the "your art sucks" thing, I try to remember that the person who posted said comment is just one person. 

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DamaiMikaz In reply to Sascha90 [2014-09-06 08:28:24 +0000 UTC]

I wish it was.
The more exposure you get, the larger the number of people that says "you suck" grows.
Looking at the whole thing, it's still a small percentage. But it's notable, and it ain't never fun.

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UnstableReactor In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 06:10:02 +0000 UTC]

I'm pretty much a solo artist on my main project, but I do have upcoming projects partnered with talented and experienced writers and business men in the future, which will hopefully give me some insight into how exactly I should be handling certain things once I get more publicity.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to UnstableReactor [2014-09-05 07:24:38 +0000 UTC]

Interesting

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kaipur In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 06:03:39 +0000 UTC]

The biggest problem for the artist is the troll population. I know waaaaayyy too many people personally who just make bad comments to rile people up because they think it's funny. If we assume that half the population of bad comments are trolls, then we can start to conclude that most of the rest are just people who don't know how to express themselves leaving a smaller portion just idiots with no decency. It is hard to ignore nasty comments. I myself get them all the time on my youtube channel. But I'm not taking them down. They can say what they wish and they generally go away because I bore them. This whole issue with Zoe and Phil is just ridiculous. People trying to create controversy where none exists. It'll blow over within a few months at which point the hate mongers will be off to their next flogging victims. It just irks me though that most of the time it is female artists getting the lash when the men are just as guilty if not more. I don't care about their personal bs. I only care about the art. Wish they'd focus on that for once.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to kaipur [2014-09-05 07:26:27 +0000 UTC]

I've never quite understood trolls.
I can imagine that it might be 'funny' for some really bored individuals with absolutely no goal in life to tease a person that angers quickly... just to see him getting angry. But I've never seen the point in trolling a person that appears decent and normal over the internet... yet that too happens a lot :/

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kaipur In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-23 07:56:12 +0000 UTC]

I don't get it either. But that's how some people get their kicks. Strangely.

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friedfoo In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 15:44:18 +0000 UTC]

While there is no point in such trolling activity, seeing the response it generates is often the payoff trolls get. So now I'm practicing the whole 'ignore' the trolls thing. Still, if the comment is really off-colour I'd still be furious, and I might end up being baited to reply...ahahaha. Also, they relieve the stress that comes from angering others online anonymously. No retribution from being a troll, as they won't feel pain or be damaged somehow.

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The-Archaeon [2014-09-05 05:14:32 +0000 UTC]

I would say it depends on your idea of a "good public image." To be honest, is a good public image having people like you? Would this still be important if you give up on your integrity as a person? For me, being unpopular and (thankfully) niche at best, integrity is everything at the moment. It's all I have, and I wouldn't trade it for anything, not even a "good public image." However, if by a good public image you're referring to actually being human and thoughtful of others (artists, fans and just people in general), then yes, to me it's important. Not because it makes me look good, but because it's the right thing to do. Of course, people will always have a bone to pick with you. The best you can do is to never give them a good reason to. At least, that's my take on it.

I guess this is something I can't really answer. I've never done anything with my art other than as a hobby.

Critiques are probably the one thing (I know I'm going to regret this) I look forward to. Not that I'm not grateful for those who drop by and say "I love your work," but I would love to hear "this is nice, but..." I don't want to coddled and led to believe that my art is worth something when it's not. I want the truth. So for me, it's something I actively seek. I don't always handle it well on the spot, but I always sit down and mull it over, and keep my mouth shut if I can't trust myself to say anything nice. I guess this can tie in a lot with that good public image. Am I censoring myself so people don't think I'm an asshole? Or am I censoring myself because I know nothing good will come out of attacking someone who's trying to be helpful? Moving along...

It depends. This comes with popularity for sure, more people view your work so, logically, there would be a greater chance of people critiquing your work. I don't really know what would qualify as an "unreasonable amount of critique." I'm trying to think on how to word examples without coming off as in favor of "deal with it, it comes with the popularity." I guess the safest way to say it would be that indeed, it comes with the popularity, but we have to understand that some people have only the best intentions in mind and aren't in our minds. They don't necessarily have access to the information that we, as artists, are already aware of what they are critiquing. They don't necessarily know that we've heard their exact comment 100 times today alone. So for that, I think it's completely unreasonable that we lash out at a specific individual just because they were unlucky enough to be "the last straw." This is all in terms of actual critiquing, constructive comments and the like.

As for hate/spam? Again, it's bound to happen sometimes. We have to deal with it. But we don't have to sit idly by and take getting smacked around by spiteful strangers. The only to be done is to go against the flow. Speak up about abuse, and help people understand how words have power on people. More than they know.

Hopefully this doesn't come across as a raging, emotion-driven rant

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EeveeDream [2014-09-05 05:00:55 +0000 UTC]

Guess I've been under a rock as well, as I've never heard of Zoe and that whole issue before now. Then again I'm not much of a gamer, so it doesn't affect me much. This topic is very interesting for artists of all kinds (I am a fiber artist, and I'm actually working on a tapestry right now) and it really makes one think about how you think the world views you, as well as how you want the world to view you. 

I personally am not well known. I neither dwell where trolls wander often nor do I really give them ammo, so public image isn't really an issue for me. But as I do more woven works it just might end up being something I would think heavily about.

~Public image is very important, if you don't want the masses to harass you like so.

~I don't have such issues, but I would handle it myself.

~I handle it pretty well. I'm working on accepting it more, as I used to hate it as a child. I grew up with everyone saying I was so perfect at things, so critique felt like they were saying I was bad at something I felt like I was supposed to be an expert at. Of course I know better now, being older and wiser than the ignorant child I was before. I like getting critique because it means I have a chance to improve and someone else cares about whether I do.

~If an artist receives an unreasonable amount of unhelpful critique, they have all grounds to lash out out of frustration as long as it isn't overboard. It's one thing to have a mini rant post, and another to do an entire piece and essay on it.

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EeveeDream In reply to EeveeDream [2014-09-05 05:02:31 +0000 UTC]

^By far one of the longest responses I've given on DA. I'm actually excited about that!  It's a new milestone!

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friedfoo In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 04:20:05 +0000 UTC]

This is an interesting piece. I'm lucky that I haven't got the experience of people saying "Your artwork sucks," The most critique I got was "Your art isn't really art, it's more of drawing the same thing over and over again," when I got that, I decided I had to try different styles. So that was useful for me to grow the skill.

The creepiest comment was for a digital fanart I did of someone in the rain and had water running down his face, but the person commented inappropriately by suggesting it was raining...well, something unpleasant and I was stupid enough to try and explain what I was trying to draw, which drew more inappropriate comments. In the end I decided to just hide the darn comment string and do a small investigation on what exactly the person does other than leaving these inappropriate comments on my page. I found that he'd/she'd also did the same thing over a few other people's artworks, and I made sure to leave a few comments in hopes that they don't feel too bad over the comments left by the person(I don't know what to call the person, maybe 'troll' would work). 

Mostly those who are very popular will get the useless critiques you suggested above. Even some popular youtubers disabled their comments as they are either flamers or advertisers.

I'm actually studying advertising so I hope I could use these skills for something. Maybe I could've gone for PR, haha.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to friedfoo [2014-09-05 10:19:43 +0000 UTC]

> The creepiest comment was for a digital fanart I did of someone in the rain and had water running down his face, but the person commented inappropriately by suggesting it was raining
What the...

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friedfoo In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 15:38:36 +0000 UTC]

raining something inappropriate to discuss in public. ._. Not just because he suggested it was raining. It was kinda like sexually inappropriate kinda comment so I don't want to put what it was into the comment.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to friedfoo [2014-09-05 19:23:35 +0000 UTC]

I can kinda imagine it... but still... WTF are some people thinking?

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TemperTempest In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 04:02:33 +0000 UTC]

Apparently I live under a rock, first thing I heard about this and well . . . It is not that captivating a situation to me. Not sure why people blew up. Do I think its good to maintain a good image in the public? Sure but The Problem is that a good image can be a matter of perspective and we cannot please everybody. Do I think some artists get overly criticized? Yeap. Justifies someone lashing out? I do not know but people have a boiling
point.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to TemperTempest [2014-09-05 07:27:36 +0000 UTC]

Well, there's an overall 'good' and 'bad'.
If you tell your audience they are faggots for not liking your newest piece, and get angry a lot, you're obviously on the 'bad' side XD

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TemperTempest In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 16:26:51 +0000 UTC]

Insulting someone is always bad, especially if it is done in a demeaning way. I think I can under set ad someone being I'll tempered and saying something along the lines of you are wrong, I am not discussing this etc.

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Star-Bell-22 In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 04:02:09 +0000 UTC]

Hmm, I haven't considered this much before (honestly I had barely heard a word about this incident before today). I think it is important to maintain a good public image at least for the sake of showing some professionalism. I don't exactly have much by way of PR, so I handle it myself, that, and I've simply never been at the center of any big conflict or controversy. I could definitely stand to handle critiques better. I know my flaws, and I have posted stupid things, and acted childishly (who hasn't, I wonder?). Being confronted with them however- I will admit with guilt that my reactions are rather poor sometimes. But that is on a social level of course. Art-wise, if people are trying to help me figure out how to draw better and more accurately, why not listen at least? I can follow the advice or not, so what is the harm in it? Though I have noticed that some artists do get an unreasonable amount of critiques.  I suppose to a point it could warrant some aggression if only because I imagine these people in question get sick of hearing the same thing over and over again. I can definitely understand if they are being regularly insulted or harassed, though some have better approaches to that situation than others. What I really wonder, you know, is how everyone would act to one another face to face? How different would those reactions be?

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DamaiMikaz In reply to Star-Bell-22 [2014-09-05 21:21:33 +0000 UTC]

> What I really wonder, you know, is how everyone would act to one another face to face? How different would those reactions be?
I bet half of them would be too afraid to even talk. I always imagine those kids that have a big mouth on the internet as the shy kids that got bullied in class and need to vent their anger somewhere on the internet.

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Star-Bell-22 In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-06 00:22:56 +0000 UTC]

You are probably right. I've known plenty of people who are normally not all that vocal, but when they're online, they get pretty aggressive. (Shoot, I've been that person before). I think just the broad age range on this site is part of why too, as far as a face-to-face meeting.

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Kiwikku In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 03:59:29 +0000 UTC]

Pewdiepie censorship. Boom.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to Kiwikku [2014-09-05 07:29:02 +0000 UTC]

Well... I can't really blame the guy.
I mean... have you actually seen those YouTube comments? I can imagine those taking quite the fun out of your job :/

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Kiwikku In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 08:12:18 +0000 UTC]

Kinda, but I really dislike people who disable comments on anything.

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DamaiMikaz In reply to Kiwikku [2014-09-05 08:46:04 +0000 UTC]

Why?
It's their right to do so.

I've disabled comments on some of my deviations too.
They were corrections done for a correct-my-art group in the past.
But people in the comment section just couldn't stop being a dick towards me and the original artist, because they felt they might've done a better job at it. To me it felt like it totally defeated the purpose of the drawing/correction. Which was; helping out the other artist... who was happy with the help. And that's why I disabled comments on them. Yeah... I could've let them on. But it felt like a total waste of time even having them, because none of the comments were helpful, and most of them were downwards insulting.

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Frydo-117 In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 03:56:34 +0000 UTC]

In terms of critique, I think anything that isnt smug or ill is fine, and how you take that criticism isnt a public matter, I've gotten perfectly constructive criticism from a friend before but ignored it because I didn't find it suitable to help me, I feel it's the artists personal decision to take criticism however they want. Though, I've never said anything wrong to that friend, I thanked him for the criticism even though I haven't used it, and I think artists should do that out of plain respect for those who take the time to suggest how you can improve.

On another note, try not to use things like the Quinn affair to start these things, she abused critique, censored, and acted like the victim when others were doing nothing wrong. Though, I dont support the extreme reaction (doxxing, death threats etc)

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DamaiMikaz In reply to Frydo-117 [2014-09-05 08:57:10 +0000 UTC]

Well, she might be a different case. And she did some things there were absolutely morally wrong.
Yet it kinda shocked me that an artist could be bashed on such a level. I mean; looking at it from an objective standpoint she wasn't a nice person... but she didn't do anything wrong in a strictly legal sense. And that did kinda scare me. Because if that can happen to her, who else is next?

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Frydo-117 In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 12:44:01 +0000 UTC]

Well, as long as you, I, and all the other wonderful artists out there don't sleep with people to get fake publicity...then act as if all the fair criticism against them are just horrible haters that she's a victim to...We should be good c:

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