ANST - Overlooked A&S Displays - What Do You Do?
Lee Martindale
lmartin at airmail.net
Tue Sep 9 12:44:54 PDT 1997
Gunnora Hallakarva wrote:
> Depends. If I did in fact go over your work carefully while you were in
> the privy or otherwise unavailable, I'd say so. This happens more than you
> would think.
I'm sure it does.
> I am one of those people who always writes a critique. Sometimes, like
> Mistress Siobhan, all I can say is, "You should go talk to _________ who is
> the Laurel best known for this particular art in Ansteorra," or "I can't
> judge this properly knowing nothing about _______. However, _____,
> _______, and _______ are all experts in the field. You should try and
> speak with one or more of these people if you get the chance." Therefore,
> normally you would know that I had been there while you were away.
An excellent system.
> But sometimes accidents happen, distractions abound at these events. And
> if I had inadvertently overlooked it, I'd go over and take a look then. We
> make mistakes too.
A heartening attitude, indeed.
> Master Iolo once said a very wise thing, which directly applies to the art
> of judging: "The more awards you have, the longer it takes to get to the
> privy." This is true, certainly, if you have a Laurel!
Which makes me ever so grateful to be but an itinerate bard.
> One thing that SCA arts competitions do not usually do, but might should
> consider, is to use an approach often found in art competitions at craft
> shows: there the items are looked at by the judges while isolated... the
> art and the judges are all in one area, the public and artisans are not
> allowed in, which means that the judges can hopefully get the items judges
> in the least amount of time with the most concentration.
This would seem a fine system for all concerned.
> Your judges are pure volunteers...
> normally we show up as Laurels and Irises, pad and pencil in hand,
> expecting to be needed as judges without ever being asked. We get no pay
> for this effort. Normally we must pay full site fee just as the entrants
> do. We don't get free feast. And certainly no hard cold cash. Yet we are
> expected to work our butts off all day long (owch! my feet!) much harder
> than we work at our mundane jobs and our normal reward is complaining from
> people who didn't like the critiques we did offer. At maybe a third of A&S
> events, the autocrat will remember to thank the judges -- we're Laurels,
> it's our job, right? But it's also our recreation time.
Sounds a bit like being a camp herald at Steppes Warlord.
In service,
Llereth
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