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The E-Sylum: Volume 10, Number 39, September 30, 2007, Article 14 DICK JOHNSON EVALUATES MEDALS AT THE 30TH FIDEM CONGRESS Dick Johnson writes: "And the Grand Prix, the top award of the 30th FIDEM Congress, goes to ... drum roll please maestro ... Helder Batista of Portugal. (Applause and cheers!) "Batista had medals in both the main exhibit and 'FIDEM at 70' parallel exhibition. The difference between the two is that the main exhibit were medals created in the last two years, since the 2005 Congress. The parallel exhibit was composed of medallic items created in the past, a retrospective of past FIDEM exhibits. "A rumor circulated that the decision had been made before the delegates even arrived in Colorado Springs. Did the current exhibitors even have a chance at the prize? Do I detect a touch of cronyism here between artist and judges? The winning artist's medallic creations in the present exhibition were rather lackluster in this critic's opinion. "Had the officials wanted to honor Batista, they should have given him a 'Lifetime Achievement Award.' But then give the Grand Prix -- as it should have been -- to the best medallic piece in the show. "Long before the awards banquet, I examined every medal in the exhibition. I ranked every medal from zero to ten based on what I considered its desirability, its potential popularity. I had done this at the last FIDEM held in America in 1987, also in Colorado Springs sponsored by the ANA. I based this ranking on my intuition as a medal dealer at the time. "How would each medal appeal to an American medal collector? I analyzed every medal on display by many factors: design, innovation, creativity, beauty, technical perfection, topical interest, theme development and appropriate inscription. It took seven hours across two days to do my inspections and ratings this time. "So here are Dick Johnson's awards. A tie for Grand Prix. Only two artists got two tens. I would give the Grand Prix to both Daniel Taton of France and Magdalena Dobruccka of Poland. Taton did one medal for the chosen theme of the Exhibition 'Passages To Reconstruction' with the Twin Towers in flames, titled 'September 11, 2001.' The theme of the artist's other ten was the 'Concord,' certainly a candidate for an aviation and space topic collector. "For Madame Dobruccka's twin tens she choose Mozart and Rembrandt, not only in artistic format but choose a universally popular topic, music. Another of her creations, 'Kite' was illustrated on the cover of the 'Numismatist' September 2007 issue handed out to everyone who registered to attend the exhibition. It contained my article, 'Objects of Desire' illustrated with ten medals all shown in the exhibition. "Now for the nations that won the highest rank in the Olympics of Medallic Art. The Gold goes to Italy (with a 6.47 average for 45 medals), the Silver to France (despite a low turnout, a 6.4 for 17 medals) -- no surprise for either of these nations -- both long established in the art medal field. "The surprise -- and this may be considered an upset -- the Olympic Bronze goes to Canada (with a 6.1 for 46 medals)! "The United States ranked below a mediocre average, 20th among 32 nations (4.4 for 65 medals). In conversation with a sculptor-painter artist visiting from Santa Fe, he told me, "I wasn't going to say anything, but is this the best we can do?" U.S. medals earned: six 0s, four 1s, five 2s, ten 3s, seven 4s, nine 5s, ten 6s, eight 7s, no 8s, five 9s, one 10. Total 286 points across 65 medals. I gave a 10 to Jeanne Stephens-Sollman's 'ICFAD,' for the International Council of Fine Art Deans -- a stunning milieu of themes -- literature, theater, painting, all the arts. Obviously a highly artistic medal was required for an art organization. "Last place in my accounting fell to Portugal. In a striking contrast, Portugal had the greatest number of artists, 43, and the greatest number of medals exhibited, 79. But this critic gave this nation the lowest ranking of medal desirability of all nations, 2.49 (with only 189 points out of a possible 790). I felt this country's art medallists are moving too far afield from traditional or popular art medal desirability. These artists have every right to do this but can be considered creating small sculptural objects rather than reproducible medallic objects as struck or cast medals. "Next week: A report for E-Sylum readers on the FIDEM Exhibition catalog." DICK JOHNSON REPORTS FROM THE COLORADO SPRINGS FIDEM CONGRESS esylum_v10n38a09.html Wayne Homren, Editor The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization promoting numismatic literature. See our web site at coinbooks.org. To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor at this address: whomren@coinlibrary.com To subscribe go to: https://my.binhost.com/lists/listinfo/esylum | |
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