“you’re completely missing the point of [some piece of art]”
I think this is also why I have a knee-jerk anger towards ambiguous art. in theory I think ambiguous art is meant to do one of these two things:
but the problem with each of these is:
@kasdeya as an Enjoyer and Creator of highly ambiguous art (intentionally and unintentionally) and generally just speaking in an obtuse way, i think both of your points are spot on; especially when it comes to much art and literature analysis. going through my lit classes in college nearly killed my love for it. i remember submitting a very deeply researched paper about a story’s themes and symbolism; it was open for critique from the class and from the professor. for some reason, mine drew the attention of everyone who were very eager to tell me that i was wrong
in those circles, despite purportedly being about assigning your own meaning or drawing new insights based on your unique experiences, there are a lot of “right” and “wrong” answers. i suspect a few reasons why these types of interpretational arguments come with such zeal, but it’s definitely A Thing. the need to be The Best at an inherently personal and subjective experience is bizarre to me. i can kind of understand when there are actual correct answers – but art?
when i make art which is ambiguous, heavily themed, or symbolic, i don’t expect my or anyone’s interpretation to right or wrong. i bring my experiences and understanding to create the symbols, to create the ambiguity, etc. others come with experiences different from my own – about those symbols, themes, and so on – and draw entirely new meanings that i could have never known. i’m not the master of symbolism, not even of the symbols i construct.