I’ve been thinking about trying to enter a local photography contest, but I keep hesitating because I’m not sure my stuff is “contest material.” Has anyone else here dealt with that weird mental block before submitting to a community event?
I know that block you mention from my camera days when the idea of a local contest made me doubt my own photos. I paused, told myself that nothing would be contest material, and then I sent one anyway and learned something from the reaction.
The idea of contest material may hinge on voice and clarity. A piece that feels intimate yet readable tends to land better in a contest context. Do you think your photos carry a thread that the judges could follow at a quick glance?
Maybe the whole thing is overhyped and the contest is a moving target that changes with the crowd. You could chase a standard that never exists. Do you want to chase a moving target or make something you enjoy?
I think you misread the problem in a funny way. You are not submitting a finished masterpiece but a snapshot of your current practice in progress. If you want feedback instead, try a mini show or a local meetup first, would that feel safer?
Consider the contest as a checkpoint on your practice journey rather than a final verdict. Pick a photo you like and see how it travels with people, even if you do not win.
Just pick the best one you love and press submit. The act of sharing changes how you see it later, contest or not.
There is a notion in art practice about the feedback loop and the courage to show work. The contest can be part of that loop, not the end of your story. What if the point is simply to test how your eye reads a crowd?