Jailbreaker wrote:Well, I seem to have created an account just to reply to this thread.
I'm glad you did, because that was pretty interesting. Just to preface my remarks in the interest of full disclosure: I'm one of those who couldn't connect that well with Rin or her story. So hearing from someone who did — and they all seem to be, like you, birds of a feather with her — gives a good insight. And might I say, for someone who counts himself like Rin, you're pretty good with words. High-functioning Rinism, if you will.
Nomiya set up the exhibition because he thought Rin wanted it, and Rin says she wants it because Nomiya set up the exhibition.
I'm not so sure that's why he set it up. I think he was trying to give her a slingshot-boost into the art world, so she could have a successful career in it — not because she wanted it, but because it would be the best career path for her. And, probably, to some small extent at least, to compensate for his own aborted art career.
Neither makes an attempt to listen to Rin's own plans for her future.
As far as I can tell, she didn't have any. Unless you spotted something I missed…?
Rin would shoot herself if Nomiya said it would make a good painting.
Really? That's kind of fascinating; I didn't get that sense at all. How are you picking up on this?
He could have tried to reassure her that stage fright, etc, is very common, and that she shouldn't feel bad about it. Instead, he berates her for, quite simply, being afraid. That's unforgivable in my book.
Mmmmm, yeah. He does let his emotions get the better of him here. But then again, who among us hasn't done that?
Or maybe he just misinterpreted her reasons for leaving. This is another similarity between Rin and me - we fail to do something because of our own damn personal flaws, but everyone insists we don't give a shit. Nomiya is doing that insisting and thinks that everything he did for Rin was meaningless. I can understand why he'd be, at the very least, angry in this situation. Rin doesn't explain herself very well here, either.
This seems pretty likely. I felt a lot like that myself about Rin. Try to have an important discussion, receive a shrug and a stare into space. Fairly maddening.
"You're not an artist at all."
Actually, it's
"You are not an artist after all.". Probably too subtle a difference to diminish your argument, though.
He just fucking gives up.
Yup. Again,
he lets his anger ruin it.
he gives up on Rin because she doesn't fit into Nomiya's extremely narrow and limited definition of "an artist."
I don't think that's quite it.
He doesn't really mean that. He's just lashing out. He's pulled all sorts of strings to get this special situation set up for her, and it ended up badly. So he feels like his efforts were flushed down the toilet.
Nomiya is very unaccepting of other peoples' opinions and viewpoints - from "the philistines" who would want to see some of Rin's simpler works to his rivalry with Mutou (which, interestingly, is going to be a plot point in a fanfiction I'm writing.) I can only imagine what he thinks of people who come from different cultures entirely, like us.
To me, it feels less like
a general unaccepting nature and more of a fixation on the supremacy of the value of art. And the more artsy, the better. Rin's more complicated pieces must be better than her simpler ones because they have "more art"; the people who can't appreciate that are not art-minded enough and thus philistines; Mutou is about science, not art, and is therefore inferior.
But I'd also like to talk about what Nomiya represents - social expectation. As much as Nomiya is an ass, someone had to do what he did. Rin doesn't need peer pressure from an ass, but that doesn't mean that she can live independently of the expectations of others. Just like the rest of us, she has responsibilities to the people around her, and if she doesn't fulfill them, she'll end up alone.
True; but I think he more specifically provides a counterpoint for Hisao.
Nomiya makes demands of her, gets angry, and it ends poorly between them — just like Hisao did instead in the bad ending.
TL;DR: Nomiya's an ass, but he's a complex, human ass. Also, the word "ass" no longer looks like a word.
"Ass, ass, ass, ass, ass, ass, ass, ass, ass!" —Bender Bending Rodríguez
Potato wrote:Jailbreaker wrote:Just like the rest of us, she has responsibilities to the people around her, and if she doesn't fulfill them, she'll end up alone.
In what way would not becoming a famous artist lead to her ending up alone? If that's what Nomiya's meant to represent, he's a flimsy representation at best.
I think he means just the general idea of having to make enough of an attempt to be able to deal with people that she doesn't end up alienating them all. Not specifically becoming a famous artist.