SCA: art and service and recognition
There are some activities in the SCA that you can take in a "service" direction or an "art" direction, or sometimes both. Scribal work (calligraphy and illumination) is an obvious area; cooking is another; others exist. Some people thrive on producing six scrolls for this weekend's event or feeding 300 people at a feast or clothing the shire for the upcoming theme event or something to that effect, and they tend to be recognized with service awards. Others are less concerned with throughput and are more interested in doing research and crafting things that are "right" and well-done, and they tend to be recognized with arts awards. Most people, of course, aren't so easily pigeon-holed and are a blend of both approaches. (It's possible to do good work quickly, after all, but it's more of a challenge.)
I find myself wondering, when considering a service-oriented person for an arts award, what the baseline quality standards ought to be. If most of the work a candidate has done is sloppy but most of that work was also done quickly, to meet a deadline, how should I weigh that? If the candidate has produced one or two high-quality pieces (to show that he can), is that enough? Is his decision to work only on the quick-and-dirty work a choice about his art, or an unfortunate effect on his art (for which he shouldn't be judged) due to a choice to serve the larger group? It would be foolish to expect everything a person produces to be top-quality, but how much high-quality work do we expect and is it mitigated by the demands of the service component?
no subject
Welcome to the club. :-) Thanks for the thoughtful comments.
4. Does correlation equal causation? i.e., if the work is sloppy, is it only sloppy in instances where the person took on the work with short notice? If the person had a great deal of time to work, does it *always* reflect their full skill or ability?
Excellent point. And relatedly, is the person taking on the last-minute work because sloppiness is more tolerated then and he feels he's not good enough to do "show" pieces?
Is providing bad or "sloppy" work really a service to the individual or group who receives it?
If it's bad work then no. If it's solidly mediocre -- "eh" food as opposed to food poisoning, that sort of thing -- it's harder to say. Ideally, the person would step aside in favor of others at times, and we'd find out whether mediocrity is pretty much a given under those circumstances or if that one person needs to take a break. (Recognizing this type of problem is something I would expect in a peer.)