Originally Posted by
Manfred M
Welcome to CiC Mich:
Let me give you the perspective of someone who is often sitting on the other side of the table when it comes to judging photography competitions. I'm a Canadian Association for Photographic Art (CAPA) trained judge who is currently working on completing my national certification.
All of the competitions I've judged are juried competitions where three judges evaluate each image, so the score is the cumulative view of three judges. Rules also require the competition chairperson to halt the judging when there is a significant difference in scoring or when extremely high or low scores are given by one of the judges. A discussion will follow and all three of the judges are allowed to update their scores based on the discussions.
Scoring is based on three factors - technical (colour, light, exposure, sharpness and technique), organizational (distractions, space and composition) and the emotional impact of the work(mood, impact, subject matter and imagination). The average time to score an image is between 10 and 20 seconds.
I've had the opportunity to work beside national and international level judges as well as photographers who are viewed as experts in particular photographic genres. The trained and certified judges are a pleasure to work with but the others are a highly variable group with some who are excellent and others who have no business judging.
The feedback session is also challenging. We are not given the scores that we assigned to the image when we are doing the feedback and often the actual judging occurred a week or more before. Trying to remember what our thoughts were when we scored an image is not easy and trying to sum up the strengths and weaknesses of an image in 20 or 30 seconds using language that is not confrontational and being constructive is challenging. These sessions last around two hours and often there are between 80 and 150 people in the room listening to what the judges have to say.
In general, we tend to look at between 200 and 300 images per competition, so when everything is looked at each judge has put between 4 and 6 hours of his or her time into the judging process for every competition. We are not paid for this time, although there is sometimes are fairly small honorarium paid to compensate us for fuel and parking charges.
That being said, I am the chairman of one of the local photography clubs and am on the executive of another. The quality of judging and comments made about the images are things I hear about fairly regularly. Some judges are not invited back... Sometimes we see entries do so-so in one competition and do extremely well in others. In spite of trying to take opinion out of the judging process as much as possible, in the end, the judge's views are just their opinion....