A few thoughts then...
Background to my opinions...
I am HIGHLY competitive and in joining my first club all I wanted to do was WIN
It took a few months to figure out what the others like, how they marked, and to assess the other members as competition, then in my 2nd year I entered with a vengeance (10 comps). I actually found it quite obsessive in nature as I won the 1st comp and then set out to win every other one too!!! And I won 9, I was sooooo annoyed at the 10th
Not only did i win POTY but also B&W print of the year, Colour print of the year, Projected image of the year and something else which I cannot recall. The following year I was just too busy but felt I'd proven myself anyway, so I backed off a bit and only won a couple. I became a committee member as the Comp Sec.
The next year a very talented chap joined the club, we became pals and did lots of shoots together, he absorbed knowledge like a sponge from me but he was also great at PP (my weakest point). The 3rd year he too entered comps and starting winning. The 4th year we set out to beat each other and along the way everyone else, then the extreme nature of it became apparent when we both started traveling further and further to get winning shots; and he had more time/money to go farther
What really made me LOL was one comp about 'Water' - he traveled to Scotland for 4 days to shoot a lake for it whereas I was only planning on going as far as the Lake District for a day. At this point I thought 'Sod it' its getting silly. On the day of the comp however I decided to shoot a macro image of water pouring into a glass in my kitchen sink - and it won !!! He was pee'd off I just pee'd myself
I then looked at it from the other members' viewpoint and found this...
Pro comps:
- they give you an aim to shoot
- you sometimes have to shoot something you wouldn't normally bother with, so you may have to push yourself and learn something new
- if you are new you see some cracking images to inspire you on the comp night, and some older members work which is rubbish and that can add confidence
- winning is a good feeling, as is doing better than your mate or even yourself in previous comps
1. I agree but I never shoot specifically for a comp.
2. I don't enter the comps that I have no interest in. That's not to say I won't
try something new at some point.
3. I agree. Its nice to see other photographers ideas.
4. I don't worry about whether I win or not. I'm more interested in the judges
comments so that I can get better.
Cons:
- losing sucks
- always losing sucks most
- most often there is no time to crit images so you don't learn why you didn't win or how to improve your own shot
- most togs can't mark for tuppence, and give highest marks to 'pretty' shots or subjects they like & understand
- the formula of winning reduces the chances of creativity
- retired folk with money stand the best chance of being able to get a cracking shot, this penalises the workers and the very young who don't drive
- its expensive to enter comps yet you win nothing of monetary value
- on trips out as a club, some members shooting for a comp will hide what they are doing to avoid helping their competition - its divisive
- some people have a style to their photos which is easy to recognise, then their mates vote for them while the jealous ones or people they that don't like them vote against
- it takes FAR too much time in the club year that teaches/discusses NOTHING to do with photography
- it can be very annoying & time consuming for the Comp Sec to organise and with no thanks or appreciation
- people who don't like comps may avoid joining your club
- people who constantly do badly stop entering, may become disillusioned and stop coming to the club (I've known some completely give up photography as a result of getting depressed by losing all the time)
1. Doesn't bother me.
2. Ditto above.
3. Not in my experience with the judges we have had. I should add here that the prints and files that will be projected are sent the the judge several weeks before the judging night so they have the opportunity to compile any comments about them.
4. Don't agree with that. In the mini comps that get marked by the members I would wager that out of the top 4 images 75% would have been in that position if marked externally.
5. Yes if you get hung up on just taking specifically for comps. I take for myself
only, never with the idea "this will make a good comp entry".
6. A good image is a good image irrespective of where its taken. We have those who spend a lot of money going to places. Majority of top three places are taken in the UK.
7. Each comp is split into print and projected image to recognise that some cannot afford to produce lots of prints. Projected is free.
8. Can't comment because I've never been. Probably correct given human nature.
9. That's true but our comps are judged by a judge from another area and they won't see enough of the photographers work to recognise it.
10. I dont think that 7 weeks out of a 27 week season isn excessive and leaves plenty of time for other subjects, whatever they are.
11. Very true and one of the biggest issues in our club is that we struggle for committee members because the majority want to sit on their asses.
12. Fair point. But all the clubs within 60 miles have a very similar format to ours.
13. This has come up in discussion several times and it is difficult to know how to resolve it. We have managed to increase out comp entry in the last three years so something must be going ok.
They are the most obvious observations of mine from being a committee member (inc. Comp Sec.) for a number of years and largely why I eventually stopped entering, resigned from the committee and left the club
For my new club (which i was asked to help steer) I made it clear we should NOT be having competitions, at least initially, but that if in time people wanted them we'd obviously look at how best to introduce them. A recent poll we did had 19 to 2 AGAINST competitions. ALL of those extra nights are now taken up by discussing, teaching & sharing photography; and that I feel is why we're grown so fast and sucked many members from the older clubs around us
Last week we had an article published in the local rag about us gaining our 50th member within 10 months of starting the club, I am aware of another 5-6 asking about joining since last week !!!
Dave