Since when has Trek had anything to do with art?
Sine this:
And this is maybe what I think Trek fans don't really GET about our collective obsession? It isn't a product of science or engineering. It isn't something created by technicians, futurists or visionaries. In the strictest sense, it isn't even a product of "writers."
It is a product of ARTISTS. Set designers, prop designers, musicians, actors, screenwriters, editors, photographers, special effects artists, graphic artists, painters, projectionists, gaffers, makeup artists, costume designers, riggers, sound designers, and so many more. We emphasize the technical minutia because that's what interests us and it's the easiest to grasp, but while things like the design of the Enterprise bridge is a very visible element in Star Trek, it is FAR from the most important.
Emphasizing my earlier point: If you're doing a Star Trek production that has Kirk, Spock and McCoy played by someone OTHER than Shatner, Kelly and Nimoy, then there is absolutely NO ground to call for the use of the original prop or set designs. Chris Pine is NOT William Shatner and doesn't look enough like him to be a perfect double, so he doesn't need to sit in a chair that looks exactly like Shatner's chair, or say dialog that sounds exactly like Shatner's dialog. Because this isn't a REMAKE of the original, it's a DERIVATIVE of the original, and a certain amount of cosmetic changes are inevitable.
The real hilarious thing is that even the original production team with the original actors and set designs available chose to make massive changes anyway (this is, after all, a thread about TMP!) and those changes angered and depressed fans for pretty much the same reason. As above, it's almost as if Da Vinci decided to do three additional portraits of Lisa Gherardini in various poses only to have all of his critics start screaming "Couldn't you have used the same background as before? And why is she wearing different clothes in the other portraits? And why isn't she smiling in the third painting? Why can't you respect the work that came before?!"