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Published: 2014-09-04 17:00:07 +0000 UTC; Views: 28735; 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
DamaiMikaz In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 12:55:27 +0000 UTC]
I'm not planning to sleep with anyone for publicity ^^
(by boyfriend wouldn't approve either. Lol XD)
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Frydo-117 In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 13:23:02 +0000 UTC]
Haha x3 So how have you been this week?
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DamaiMikaz In reply to Frydo-117 [2014-09-05 13:28:06 +0000 UTC]
Could have been better. Health related issues, mainly ^^
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Frydo-117 In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 23:02:53 +0000 UTC]
Yeah...Well I hope you get better ^-^
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mortalshinobi In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 03:49:40 +0000 UTC]
I think good public imaging and handling critiques well matters. i'll give an example. I knew an artist named ctrain who seemed to do great art of marvel, dc and game characters with intircate backgrounds and great character detail. once he did an image of juggernaut and i gave a brief critique saying he should loosen the arms a bit as they were too bulky and made it look like juggernaut was incapable of movement but that the whole had great shading and detail. his comment right off the bat was I never asked for your opinion and your art is shit. so what did that do for him? I blocked him, unwatched him and lost any respect for him. because i gave a critique he decided to attack me as a person rather than brushing the critique off or taking it for a learning exercise. and where is this guy who wanted to work for marvel? I don't know. i've looked for his art again out of curiousity and don't find the guy- but i get the feeling he dropped off unable to take critiques to any degree.
now how to handle a critique yourself? i've had to do this a few times, because i've had people complain not so much about the style but the content. I killed the darling sue or the picture is violent and bloody, or one strangely enough, asked why i drew ponies (cuz people live off gore alone) when it came to the sue, I brushed it off, said I liked so and so better and left it at that and if they kept harassing me about killing chun li for example, well I laughed it off and just told em, hey, you keep bothering me i'll off chun li again in a horrible way, cuz i'm an artist. an example of white knight backfires.
now for the gore question i have gotten it and i get less views but at the same time i look to work for a company like netherrealm and i point out, hey, these are the ones i'm trying to work for and i'm not gonna shy away from the blood and gore and guts. i have fun with it. and sure enough i have watchers who enjoy it too.
and then for the ponies? well, i just point out, hey, you need a break from your regulars. sometimes cute and fuzzy works well while you refill your tanks. it's not hard to take critiques or questions as long as the people aren't harassing you. and if they point out flaws in pictures? well, better. I may have not caught them myself and i keep em in mind for future projects.
and no, most of the time artist receive little to no critique. so saying they get too much is a bit silly. i barely get "i like this pic" or "this is cool" or even "i hate this pic" as is. and those have little content to them and i barely get much of those. so no, people don't get too many critiques.
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shapkaa In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 03:47:08 +0000 UTC]
I'm a woman aspiring to be a game developer, and it's sad how women are treated in the industry. It's not across the board, however, as there are multitudes of lovely companies out there.
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DamaiMikaz In reply to shapkaa [2014-09-05 07:35:22 +0000 UTC]
I'm not a game developer, but I'm a female webdeveloper working in a field that is (at least here) 99% male. So yeah, I can kinda relate.
But I can assure you, aside from a few sexual jokes, it's not that bad. Men are different than women, and it takes some time to adapt to an all male working environment, but it's not as bad for a woman to be in there as people suggest it is. Yes, there are people that question your skills. And yes, there are people that won't accept you. But overall just keep your head high and prove that you're worth it... it's the best you can do
If you just do you job, love what you do, go with the flow, and don't overly flaunt your sexuality (which perfectly means you can wear skirts, as long as you keep it a bit decent), people in the business will recognize you for your skills and you'll be just as much 'one of the guys' as the actual guys
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shapkaa In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 16:04:44 +0000 UTC]
I find sexual remarks to be pretty offensive and a version of harassment that should not occur in a workplace (only exception under the circumstance of consent, where you say it's ok for a certain person to make that kind of joke to you). Your advice about showing them you are capable and know your stuff stands, but we as women should not have to work so hard to prove ourselves compared to our male counterparts. We are just as capable and valuable and it's shameful that some men assume otherwise precisely because of our gender. As I like to say, my genitalia have nothing to do with the work I produce! lol Fortunately I have only thus far encountered very respectful people in the industry. The few that have doubted me because I'm a woman were just casual gamers with no experience at all with even programming or knowing how to make games go figure...
Also, it's pretty pathetic that if I am in a casual work environment (totally understandable if it's formal where everyone must dress a certain way, however game dev offices are usually not) that I can't wear a v-neck or short-shorts if that is what I am comfortable with. I personally always dress modestly because I'm completely comfortable that way, but as long as women are wearing clothes and not totally nude in the workplace, there really shouldn't be an issue of respect. I know plenty of men who could care less what women wear and respect them for the smart and talented individuals that they are, so I don't get why all men can't do the same. The issue of showing skin is a completely "Western" issue, as in many other cultures women bear breasts on a daily basis, some women don't wear clothes at all and their bodies are not hypersexualized. It's because of the fact that women's bodies are considered so taboo to the point that I can't wear shorts exposing too much of my THIGH (my thigh, not even anything that by our societal standards should be 'put away'"), I get negative attention. Like it's just my leg, people... >>
Thanks for the long reply also, this discussion is a very fun and necessary one in my opinion
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DamaiMikaz In reply to shapkaa [2014-09-05 19:22:39 +0000 UTC]
> but we as women should not have to work so hard to prove ourselves compared to our male counterparts
It might be a programmer-thing to gain respect by having skills. But it's fairly normal in that world, regardless or gender.
> the few that have doubted me because I'm a woman were just casual gamers with no experience at all with even programming
Yep, and that's mostly it. Those who don't know what effort it takes to do something, are the first people to insult others.
> Also, it's pretty pathetic that if I am in a casual work environment that I can't wear a v-neck or short-shorts if that is what I am comfortable with
I've mainly been in offices with rules when it came to clothing (no super short shorts), but I can imagine it goes two ways. I rather don't want to see my fellow male programmers showing up at the office without a shirt either, even though they might feel comfortable that way and it's hot in summer. So yeah... a bit of modesty and consideration never hurts from both sides. Overall, it's mainly a thing of communication. Some co-workers are just not used to women in the office (yes, sometimes it's that bad) so if they do something I feel uncomfortable with (like sexist jokes that go a bit too far), I just tell 'em. And I suppose when they're uncomfortable with me in any way, they tell me to. I mean; if you respect each other for the skills and you work together that's the least you can do.
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Boomblox5896 In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 02:19:59 +0000 UTC]
My old Military History teacher had a policy for the way he said we should do some work and I truly believe that we should follow it sometimes. He said "KISS: Keep It Simple Stupid", basically saying that we shouldn't worry about making things more complicated than it needs to be. I think that we should be content with letting the best man have his share and being content with what we have and not go on a twisted and dark path to try to reach the top. That'll only make you fall into the darkness much further and with a more agonizing pain than you would feel just being slow in the race of the big scheme of things. I don't take criticism badly and whatever turns up as bashing, I simply dismiss as a foolish thought running about. There is no need for making a ruckus to bend the world to your will and make an evil legacy out of yourself. Like my teacher said before: Keep It Simple Stupid. Those are words to live by.
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AzureWindProductions In reply to Boomblox5896 [2014-09-05 03:59:20 +0000 UTC]
I agreed, good words to live by.
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kadvas In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 02:19:58 +0000 UTC]
This sort of post should be linked from the frontpage
so many people need to see this it's not even funny
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BlackAngelLilith In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 02:00:37 +0000 UTC]
*Do you think its important to maintain a good public image?
I would have to say yes on this one but more then anything I think its good to have an honest image, because no matter what people are going to find something about you that irks them, people even hate others for being too happy. But as long as your passionate about what you do and do your best to improve upon yourself then the public can waste their time on caring about trivial things as much as they want.
*Do you have people to help you handle hard PR related issues , or do you handle everything yourself?
I usually handle everything myself, but if I ever come across something that I need help with then I ask.
*How do you handle critique?
Okay…this will sound stupid but I will be honest. I am happy that someone even bothered to critique my stuff, this probably stems from the fact that I didn’t have many friends and I suffer from depression so I often feel terrible about dumb things. My brain even concocts things for me to feel bad about. Arts pretty much the only thing that has helped me feel happy and someone giving me even a small compliment makes me feel like I won a grand prize and even someone telling me that I need to improve in some areas makes me feel just as good, because someone is being honest with me and I get too become better in what I love to do.
*Do you think some artists receive an unreasonable amount of critique? (and does that make it reasonable they lash out sometimes?)
Yes. A good critique is one that’s honest yet reasonable, for example ‘the colors are very vibrant and I love how well proportioned everything is’.
A bad critique is usually the one that extremely nitpick and is actually aimed towards hurting someone for example ‘the colors are way to bright and the nose looks to weird, why do you keep messing up on the hands?’
If someone seems to be bullying you then its better to speak up about it and make them see that they can’t get away with being trolls rather then being silent and letting them move on to the next person to poke fun at. You can’t throw a punch but standing up to them verbally is enough to irritate them so they can back off. So lashing out in a healthy manner (if that makes sense) is good, as a human being with feelings you deserve to have your feelings considered.
This was a nice thing to read and I’m definitely going to share this, and quite unfortunately I have been living under a rock (been doing research for my stories and such).
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CritrDG In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 01:57:10 +0000 UTC]
Something that applies in reality and even more so in the internet where everything is being amplified tenfold is "Karma". Always have that in the back of your head. Be honest, be yourself. If not, it can backfire.
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DamaiMikaz In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-05 07:35:59 +0000 UTC]
And what if people don't like "you" ?
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CritrDG In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 14:31:38 +0000 UTC]
You worry too much if people like you or not, people can smell that litterally, don't wrap your head around those things, it just shows how insecure you are. i don't know, these mechanisms and reactions are so simple, and driven by such simple instincts, it's in my eyes, contraproductive to make such a complex problem out of it. problems like these always existed, even without computer, just not that amplified and in a small room.
I struggled a lot when i was going to school, there was no internet or anything of that sort, people now aren't very different, just more of the same.
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DamaiMikaz In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-05 14:40:24 +0000 UTC]
I don't think it's strange to be worried if you look at what the consequences can be.
I mean; having all your personal info leaked out and people coming to your door is nothing compared to high school bullying.
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CritrDG In reply to DamaiMikaz [2014-09-05 15:01:36 +0000 UTC]
well, as i said, it's basically the same, just amplified tenfold, and thats why you should be very aware on what you do on the web and what not to do, this is a place free to do anything, even more so than the real world, this aspect is also amplified tenfold and it's a fault of our society that forces this "exaggeration of freedom" into the web and "cutting it" in the real world. that leads back to your social competence. (also....this is a number one rule i've learned when using the internet for the first time, never include personal information anywhere)
And no, it's not strange to be worried, but i suppose you know what you do on the web, and so do a lot of other people. of coourse it will get you into massive problems if you sleep with gaming journalists to twek the reviews when every other source of review is horrible to bad, it's pretty obvious that something is absolutely wrong, and it makes people angry. it's just a simple formula, now if she didn't had this positive review on kotaku and no connection to that gaming journalist, she would still be left with a bad game but no one would care, and that should be a sign for her to WORK on her profession and not to force herself into the limelight, even if it's with alleged "oh now it's like this, and that and threats", only an idiot would take those threats seriously, and before the doxxing it was announced that zoe would pull a stunt like that, which makes the whole thing a bit shady and questionable again. thats the problem in the first place, if you are an ass, no one likes you, if you offend a community, you're not liked by them, and if you use shady tactics to make your point and gain a reputation you're not really believable. this is also a VERY basic thing. atleast thats my opinion on that subject matter. it's karma, if you're an ass, everyone else is an ass to you.
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DamaiMikaz In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-05 19:39:33 +0000 UTC]
I shall try not to be an ass then
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-05 02:35:57 +0000 UTC]
How do you know Karma is both real and effective?
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-05 14:33:17 +0000 UTC]
Simple, also a simple wy to try it, karma isn't a word for "magic", it's simply a word for "social capability". next time you go to the street, smile at someone who looks in your direction and wait for the reaction.
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-05 19:21:51 +0000 UTC]
Ok....
They slapped me. Now what?
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-05 21:03:47 +0000 UTC]
i take shit that didn't happen for....
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-05 22:28:57 +0000 UTC]
I was just hit by a car.
WHY did you make me do this? WHY?!
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-05 23:24:41 +0000 UTC]
never happened either c'mon, stop lying.
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-05 23:26:02 +0000 UTC]
Seriously though, Karma doesn't exist.
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-05 23:42:11 +0000 UTC]
gravity doesn't exist either eh? it's as i've explained, it's a derivation of action and reaction, of course it does exist, don't question basic science -_-.
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-05 23:46:44 +0000 UTC]
Gravity can be tested and observed. go outside and throw an apple into the air and it comes back down. Observable.
Karma can't. Evidence for Karma is anecdotal at best.
Also, Karma doesn't take into account good people who suffer everyday, anyway.
Like Robin Williams, starving African people, murder victims, Victims of theft, and you get my point.
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-05 23:55:30 +0000 UTC]
Karma can be tested and observed aswell, the point is, you get a reaction and you know by the signals, what is worth letting in your life or not.
Now mixing several cases together doesn't help your argument at all.
First off we have robin williams, he certainly had a taste of karma being the great person he was, being sick and suffering under severe depression is something entirely different and not a normal "phase" of ones life, he was sick, and suffering, regardless of good karma or not, if you have a chemical imabalance in your brain, you can't help yourself in several cases.
then we have starving children in africa. okay, there a good one, from my former workplace the dad of my boss went to africa for a short period on holidays to kenya. there are poor people and starving children too, but they greet you with smiles and open arms and friendlyness and share what they have, that is karma. a friend of mine traveled back to her home country kazakhstan, they have nothing there, they smile and share and giving everyone a smile on their faces, that is karma.
uuh, murder victims, pretty self explanatory why there can't follow a reaction. yeah there's a shitload of bad people on this planet and a shitload of suick stuff that happens, but would you rather be a person who orbit with these shitty people and be a magnet for the negative things in the world, or would you rather like to show your smile and occassionally get smiled back at you? so, karma is not a fucking magic word for some invisible god in the sky, it's a basic social competence.
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-06 00:18:40 +0000 UTC]
when? Could you point me to it? If not...
Give me a hard definition right now, then.
I just want to make sure my research on the subject lines up with your thinking.
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-06 00:25:48 +0000 UTC]
Well, you don't really need to reasearch this stuff, since you should have grown up with it like everyone ese, but okay.
Karma itself is just a word, in some religions it's a raw term for the deeds in this life that determine the fate in the next life. in some instances it's a direct follow up of events, not jumping from life to life, but a direct response to an action that follows, like i described earlier. you can take it spiritually, or you can take it as hard life guidance, since as i said, it's a rule like...everyone should have grown up with it.
"Karma is defined as many things. Some say it’s definition is: You get what you put out. Whatever you release into the universe, Comes back to you in one way or another."
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-06 00:43:09 +0000 UTC]
"Well, you don't really need to research this stuff, since you should have grown up with it like everyone else, but okay."
Not everybody is a Buddhist, dude. Kinda unfair to just expect everybody to learn the same ideology.
"Karma itself is just a word, in some religions it's a raw term for the deeds in this life that determine the fate in the next life. in some instances it's a direct follow up of events, not jumping from life to life, but a direct response to an action that follows, like i described earlier. you can take it spiritually, or you can take it as hard life guidance, since as i said, it's a rule like...everyone should have grown up with it."
Taking it spiritually means you have to believe in an afterlife in the first. Not everybody believes in those. What if there ISN'T an afterlife? So, if you get what you put out, what do those smiley starving Africans people get? Life isn't fair, dude. Life is very uneven. You use the smiling at somebody and them smiling back as an example, but that is very weak because not everybody smiles back. If they do, it's more of an obligation to try to be polite than a reward.
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-06 00:46:47 +0000 UTC]
you're wrong and you're pulling apart my sentences in the wrong way. it's a way of life, nothing to do with hindu or religion, the basic principle alone works, and thats what counts.
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-06 00:52:59 +0000 UTC]
The word karma COMES from Buddhism, dude.
So if you say it has nothing to do with religion, why do you say rewards may come in the next life? That's religious.
"the basic principle alone works, and thats what counts."
How so?
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-06 01:01:40 +0000 UTC]
sorry, you're taking everything far to literal and seem to be a total stranger to derivations of existing things. i said "some people see it this way, some take it that way, and some that way, universally it boild down to some basic mechanics", you're forcing it's religious origins on it and only give it one prime function, which is wrong, i've shown you several way to live karma, you chose to be ignorant, everyone else reading this conversation will have understood by now, i give you guarantee on that.
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-06 01:07:09 +0000 UTC]
"you're forcing it's religious origins on it and only give it one prime function"
Because it's a religious concept founded by religious people that you're trying to shove your own definitions and interpretations into.
"which is wrong, i've shown you several way to live karma, you chose to be ignorant, everyone else reading this conversation will have understood by now, i give you guarantee on that."
To be fair, you've shown me the smiley thing, but you have yet to get into the mechanics of how it works. Which is what I'm looking for.
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-06 01:16:33 +0000 UTC]
i'm not trying to shove in my own definitions.
Other words for karma: destiny , fate , kismet , fortune , providence ,predestination
atmosphere , aura , feeling , vibes , vibrations ,ambiance chose whatever fits you best, the basics "action and followed reaction" is implied in all of them.
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-06 01:21:28 +0000 UTC]
This would prolly make sense if you could actually tell me how your version of karma works...
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-06 01:24:34 +0000 UTC]
i told you ten times now, if you don't know it by now.....:/
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-06 01:25:50 +0000 UTC]
You keep saying that....
But you have yet to.
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-06 01:38:10 +0000 UTC]
the smile thing is the easiest example, however it's working with everything, how you interact with people, with your environment, how you look at people, what you're charisma is like, if you'd be likely to help people, to give guidance, to spring into action when needed, to be yourself, to take a joke, to give out positive thoughts and vibes. sometimes people are like mirrors, what you give out, will come back, and with a good mindset and the basic rules of what i mean with the word "karma" it's more likely that more doors in your life are likely to open. to take criticism and form something good out of it.
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TheGutterBunny In reply to CritrDG [2014-09-06 01:45:22 +0000 UTC]
OH. NOW I get it.
I wouldn't call that karma though. People will confuse it with the Buddhist thing. People like me.
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CritrDG In reply to TheGutterBunny [2014-09-06 01:48:05 +0000 UTC]
www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpuyNv… this is a pretty good description....karma translated literally means cause & effect
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XbinaryBrwnfanartist In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 01:21:48 +0000 UTC]
Do you think it's it's important to maintain a good public image? - Depends what a good public image is, or maybe depends what the artist wants to see themselves as. If they're known for illustrating, lets say, children's books, maybe they do. But if they want to be known as debauched and decadent, then the public image probably matters less. Of course, there are limits.
Do you have people to help you handle hard PR related issues, or do you handle everything yourself? Never thought about it.
How do you handle critique? I like, 'you do a top-down perspective by getting rid of the closest wall'. But 'your anatomy isn't good' doesn't help much at all.
Do you think some artists receive an unreasonable amount of critique? (and does that make it reasonable they lash out sometimes?) Again, it depends. 'your art sucks' 'so do you' would make sense. 'your hands are a bit off, here's how you can improve'. 'GET BENT!, probably not a commensurate reaction. OO;;
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Neglea In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 00:32:24 +0000 UTC]
To be honest, I don't like it when people measure your art on how you are as a person. It's ridiculous, it's like judging a child based on its parents (art lives on it's own and some folks haven't realized that yet...). Public image shouldn't be of relevance, sadly it always is...
I remember my teachers of literature encouraging us back in school to interpret the novels based on the author's background - they were basically drilling us to measure the art based on its artists - and that's wrong. Is a book 'bad', just because we consider the author a 'pain in the ass'? If Tolkien would've been a Nazi, would "Lord of the Rings" be a bad book today (it probably would...)? Same question goes for all artists/musicians and so on. The artists merely gave life to that novel/art, it doesn't mean the novel/art is the artists himself - and it should be viewed independently. Okay, it has some traits of the author, but so does a child have traits of it's parents, but that doesn't mean it's exactly like the parents.
I love critique though, it often reveals flaws you would have noticed much later and sometimes it can be even inspiring. Plus critique shows the viewer took his time analyzing the picture/text (I mean, anyone can write "that's cool" or whatever even without having a glimpse at your art). But like you said, "that sucks" isn't really critique but harassment. If it would have been written like "It's sucks, because *blabla*" that would be a different story. Critique implies arguments even though they're subjective, but still something an artist can use to evaluate how his art affect others. But people shouldn't take it for granted that the artist has to adapt their point of view, they also don't have to be disappointed if the artist doesn't accept it, because it still remains in the back of his head and influences his art slightly (may it even be subconsciously), so not a single critique is in vain as long as it has arguments in it. Of course it pleases the artist more if the critique is "sugar-coated", i.e. mentioning also what's good about his art, it weakens the "harshness", and many artists seem to be of a sensible nature. Sadly there are also those who see even the sugar-coated critique as harassment, which in turn scares people off writing a critique, because they want to avoid trouble and/or hurting the artist.
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D0-lT In reply to ??? [2014-09-05 00:08:36 +0000 UTC]
• Do you think it's it's important to maintain a good public image?
You could have artistic skills greater than God's and will still be hated on by others if you act like a total jerk. To me, there are three things you need to be a good artist: passion, determination, and good attitude.
• Do you have people to help you handle hard PR related issues, or do you handle everything yourself?
I don't want anyone to get involved with what I don't require to do, but there isn't any chance I'll be handling them myself, either.
• How do you handle critique?
It depends on the critique. All true feelings are kept to myself, no matter how hard it is. But if I get a critique that doesn't compliment me on anything at all, I feel like I've done a really bad job, making whatever I was making not worth it. It's understandable, honestly, but it still hurts.
• Do you think some artists receive an unreasonable amount of critique? (and does that make it reasonable they lash out sometimes?)
If it's mostly just nitpicking, then sure, they can get some critique they don't deserve. But there are better ways to express yourself without having to lash out. You gain more by being respectful. You have to be a great deal of a reasonable/persuasive person to get most of everyone on your side and still be very harsh.
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