Dictatorship of amateurs: why is my art judged by people who never heard of composition?

Photographer Review: claim about mass voting
Editorial Response
The view that mass voting kills professionalism comes from seeing only the bottom of the pyramid. Here is why broad audience participation at stage one is necessary and how the system protects strong authors.
1. Scale as a reason. The award receives over 450,000 photos. It is physically impossible for 50 jury members to manually review the full pool at once — around 9,000 frames each — which would turn judging into mechanical scrolling. Therefore, stage-one mass voting is a necessary filter removing technical defects and clearly weak works.
2. Visual resonance test. Mass voting is the toughest audit of whether your image can communicate and hook without author explanations. A strong photo should work in open field, understandable both to a casual viewer and an expert. If it does not resonate broadly, this is an important signal about visual language readability.
3. Professional tiers. 35AWARDS is structured as a funnel: stage one is open voting; stage two brings in the 35PHOTO professional community (authors with moderated portfolios); stage three is decided by 50 recognized experts from 50 countries. So the “dictatorship of amateurs” ends where top-level selection begins.
4. Jury rescue right. We know deep or specific works may score lower in mass audience. That is why jury members can manually transfer complex works to next stage regardless of current rating. This protects talented frames from being lost due to crowd taste bias.
5. Anonymity and no regalia. In voting, everyone is equal. The system hides names and statuses, forcing evaluation of image only. Authors who complain about incompetent judging often avoid showing their own works for open comparison. Here, craft is evaluated without legacy-name magic — painful for some, but fair.
Conclusion: A 35AWARDS result is not random crowd choice; it is passage through three independent filters: mass perception, professional environment, and world-expert verdict. If a work reaches final, it has passed all levels. The contest does not adapt to author expectations; it provides an objective snapshot of how your work resonates with the world right now.


