Difference between revisions of "Ken McIntyre Award"

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A [[British]] award for the best [[fanzine]] art named after [[British]] [[fanartist]] [[Ken McIntyre]]. It was first awarded in 1971It is unclear when (if) it ceased to be awarded.
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A [[British]] award for the best [[fanzine]] art, named to commemorate [[fan artist]] [[Ken McIntyre]], who died in August 1968. Once or twice, the longer name '''Ken McIntyre Memorial Award''' appeared; ''[[Checkpoint]]'' 15 also mentioned a [[fund]] associated with it. There was a trophy of some kind passed among the winners, with their names "presumably engraved" on it.
 +
 
 +
It is unclear how exactly the award ceased to exist, and even its inauguration misfired: ''[[Then]]'' quotes ''[[Pablo]]'' 12 reports from December 1970 that the Ken Mcintyre award "was being organised by [[Rog Peyton]] and would be presented for the first time at the 1971 [[Eastercon]]", but then ''[[Checkpoint]]'' [https://checkpoint.ansible.uk/cp000b.html#02 Trial Issue 0] and ''[[Focal Point]]'' reported it as "not awarded this year". (This may have to do with a complicated and lengthy nomination process that the final rules entailed.)
 +
 
 +
It seems to have had a fraught history.  Already in 1981, the [[Yorcon 2]] PR 2 mentioned it as "sadly neglected in recent years" (together with the [[Doc Weir Award]]; PR 4 rephrased it as "often neglected"). [[Keith Freeman]] was the administrator then, and the eligibility period was described as "the convention year", i. e. the time since the last [[Eastercon]].
 +
 
 +
In 1989, the rules were reported (apparently, they were re-printed in the Eastercon program books or Progress Reports at least until [[Beccon]] 1987, but these are not available online yet) as:
 +
 
 +
  The Ken McIntyre award is given for the best [[fanzine]] artwork of the year. All pieces of art must be nominated in advance. Both the original artwork and a published copy must be on display at the [[con]]. The winner is chosen by a committee that consists of:
 +
 +
1) A [[BSFA]] nominee,
 +
2) A [[Knights of St. Fantony]] nominee,
 +
3) The [[convention committee]] nominee,
 +
4) [[Rog Peyton]] (or proxy),
 +
5) A. N. Other.
 +
 +
In the event that any of these members is not available, then the remaining members of the Ken McIntyre award committee may select others to make up the number.
 +
 
 +
By mid-1990s, the award had a hiatus of 3 years, both due to general changes in fandom and fanzines, and a loss of energy or interest by the original organisers. There was a [[rec.arts.sf.fandom]] [https://groups.google.com/g/rec.arts.sf.fandom/c/kxEo-Aequmc/m/YhlTPpJaMGAJ discussion in 1998], where [[Bernie Peek]] posted:
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 +
The Ken MacIntyre [''sic!''] award is in an even worse state [''than the [[Doc Weir Award]] discussed originally'']. It wasn't mentioned in the con publications this year [''later corrected as it was in PR3''] and wasn't awarded. The award was originally intended to be for [[fanzine]] art. The conditions laid down for choosing the recipient makes it very difficult to administer. Because it's theoretically possible to meet the conditions, no Eastercon feels that it has the authority to change the rules.
 +
 
 +
As noted, the 1998 committee was interested in presenting it, but their trial balloon in PR3 did not elicit sufficient response.
 +
 
 +
[[Bridget Hardcastle]] [https://groups.google.com/g/rec.arts.sf.fandom/c/kxEo-Aequmc/m/Hf_74J9KUbsJ replied]:
 +
 
 +
We tried to administer the Ken MacIntyre [''sic!''] award at [[Evolution|the 1996 Eastercon]]. Both the original and the published form of the [[art]]work need to be displayed, and must be judged by a panel of five people […] [[Ken Slater]] and [[Rog Peyton]] were two of the judges in 1996 - one of them was keen for the award to be revived and publicised to encourage more entrants, the other thought it might be better if it died quietly. We could not award the prize that year, as there was only one entrant.
 +
 
 +
[[John Dallman]] mentioned "a small fanzine I did about it" in 1997, and [https://groups.google.com/g/rec.arts.sf.fandom/c/kxEo-Aequmc/m/8BjBOIicmoEJ another re-post] by [[Dave Langford]] summarised most that was known by then.
  
 
<tab head=top>
 
<tab head=top>
  Year || Winner || Reason || Notes
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  Year || Winner || Reason || Notes / source
1971 || [[Jim Pitts]] || || Also reported in ''[[Focal Point]]'' as "not awarded this year"
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1972 || [[Jim Pitts]] || cover of ''[[Balthus]]''&nbsp;2 || Wrongly announced in ''[[Vector]]'' (62?) BSFA News column as [[Martin Pitt]]; error reproduced in the first version of [[Rob Hansen]]'s ''[[THEN]]''. Erratum note in ''[[Vector]]'' 63. The ''Balthus'' 2 piece is named as the winning artwork in [https://s3.us-west-1.wasabisys.com/luminist/FZ/DH_1974_2.pdf a Pitts interview] in ''[[Dark Horizons]]'' 9.
1972 || [[David Fletcher]] || ||
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1973 || [[David Fletcher]] || cover of ''[[Shadow (Sutton)]]''&nbsp;18 || Reported in ''[[Checkpoint]]'' 37 and 38
1974 || [[Carol Gregory]] || ||
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1974 || not presented || || According to report in ''[[Checkpoint]]'' 47 ||
1976 || [[Jon Langford]] || ||
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1975 || [[Carol Gregory]] || || Reported in ''[[Checkpoint]]'' 61 ||
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1976 || [[Paul Dillon]] || || Assumed from [https://taff.org.uk/reports/rt1.html slightly garbled report] in [[Tackett's Travels in Taffland]]; no mention in ''[[Checkpoint]]''
 +
1977 || [[Jon Langford]] || ?cover of ''[[Drilkjis]]''&nbsp;1 || Year and win confirmed in ''[[Twll-Ddu]]'' 7, May 1977
 
1978 || [[Steve Bruce]] || ||
 
1978 || [[Steve Bruce]] || ||
 
1981 || [[Pete Lyon]] || ||
 
1981 || [[Pete Lyon]] || ||
 
1982 || [[Rob Hansen]] || ||
 
1982 || [[Rob Hansen]] || ||
1994 || [[Barbara Mascetti]] || for the Stratmann wedding invitation ||
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1985 || [[Iain Byers]] || cover of ''[[Wallbanger]]'' 9 || Reported in ''[[Birmingham Science Fiction Group Newsletter]]'' 164, April 1985
2001 || [[Tom Abba]] || best unpublished work in the art show ||
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1989 || [[Jim Porter]] || || See next item
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1990 || [[Jim Porter]] || || Reported in BSFA ''[[Matrix]]'' 88, June/July 1990, as his "second year running" win
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1991 || [[Colin Johnston]] || [[Illumination]] badge design || Reported in BSFA ''[[Matrix]]'' 94
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1992 || [[Colin Johnston]] || cover of [[Illumination]] program book || Reported in ''[[Brum Group News]]'' 248, May 1992 (winner here spelt Colin Johnson)
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1994 || [[Barbara Mascetti]] || the [[Gary Stratmann|Stratmann]] wedding invitation || Reported in ''[[Ansible]]'' 81
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1995 || [[Dave Harwood]] || cover of ''[[Attitude]]''&nbsp;2 || Reported in ''[[Ansible]]'' 94
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1996 || not&nbsp;presented || || "received no nominations" according to ''[[Ansible]]'' 106; just one recalled by administrators, see above
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1998 || not presented || || "still languishing in fannish apathy", as ''[[Ansible]]'' 130 put it
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1999 || [[Tom Abba]] || || Reported in ''[[Ansible]]'' 142, incl. the award being "formerly for fanzine art, now revived for 'unpublished artwork in Eastercon [[art show]]'"
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2000 || [[Sue Mason]] || [[2Kon]] ''[[Progress Report]]''&nbsp;1 cover || https://news.ansible.uk/a154.html#01
 
</tab>
 
</tab>
  
It seems to have had a fraught history.  There was an online discussion in 1998 and [[Bridget Hardcastle]] posted:
+
Even the reform attempts, whatever they brought beside the relaxation of eligibility (downsizing the jury was discussed), turned out to be shortlived: the [[Paragon]] 2001 report in ''Ansible'' 166 does not mention the award at all, but [[Jay Hurst]] won the "''[[Paper Tiger]]'' [[art show]] award", which Abba won as well in 1999. As this was presumably better sponsored and organised, it would have made the McIntyre's new definition superfluous.  
 
 
We tried to administer the Ken MacIntyre award at the 1996 Eastercon. Both the original and the published form of the artwork need to be displayed, and must be judged by a panel of five people including (I think - my brain is being severely dredged at this point) a con committee member, a [[Knight of St Fantony]], a member of some other group (either Brum, [[BSFA]] or [[FoF]], I forget) and two other people chosen in an arcane manner.
 
 
 
Later, [[Bernard Peak]] posted
 
The Ken MacIntyre award is in an even worse state. It wasn't mentioned in the con publications this year [1998] and wasn't awarded. The award was originally intended to be for fanzine art. The conditions laid down for choosing the recipient makes it very difficult to administer. Because it's theoretically possible to meet the conditions, no Eastercon feels that it has the authority to change the rules.
 
 
 
In 1989 the rules were reported as:
 
 
 
The Ken McIntyre award is given for the best fanzine artwork of the year. All pieces of art must be nominated in advance. Both the original artwork and a published copy must be on display at the con. The winner is chosen by a committee that consists of:
 
 
1) A BSFA nominee,
 
2) A Knights of St.Fantony nominee,
 
3) The convention committee nominee,
 
4) Rog Peyton (or proxy),
 
5) A.N.Other.
 
 
In the event that any of these members is not available, then the remaining members of the Ken McIntyre award committee may select others to make up the number.  
 
  
...this all seems pretty complicated...
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{{SFE|name=mcintyre_ken}}
  
{{award | start=1971 }}
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{{award | start=1972 |end=2000 }}
 
[[Category:UK]]
 
[[Category:UK]]

Revision as of 02:51, 3 October 2023

A British award for the best fanzine art, named to commemorate fan artist Ken McIntyre, who died in August 1968. Once or twice, the longer name Ken McIntyre Memorial Award appeared; Checkpoint 15 also mentioned a fund associated with it. There was a trophy of some kind passed among the winners, with their names "presumably engraved" on it.

It is unclear how exactly the award ceased to exist, and even its inauguration misfired: Then quotes Pablo 12 reports from December 1970 that the Ken Mcintyre award "was being organised by Rog Peyton and would be presented for the first time at the 1971 Eastercon", but then Checkpoint Trial Issue 0 and Focal Point reported it as "not awarded this year". (This may have to do with a complicated and lengthy nomination process that the final rules entailed.)

It seems to have had a fraught history. Already in 1981, the Yorcon 2 PR 2 mentioned it as "sadly neglected in recent years" (together with the Doc Weir Award; PR 4 rephrased it as "often neglected"). Keith Freeman was the administrator then, and the eligibility period was described as "the convention year", i. e. the time since the last Eastercon.

In 1989, the rules were reported (apparently, they were re-printed in the Eastercon program books or Progress Reports at least until Beccon 1987, but these are not available online yet) as:

The Ken McIntyre award is given for the best fanzine artwork of the year. All pieces of art must be nominated in advance. Both the original artwork and a published copy must be on display at the con. The winner is chosen by a committee that consists of: 

1) A BSFA nominee, 
2) A Knights of St. Fantony nominee, 
3) The convention committee nominee, 
4) Rog Peyton (or proxy), 
5) A. N. Other. 

In the event that any of these members is not available, then the remaining members of the Ken McIntyre award committee may select others to make up the number. 

By mid-1990s, the award had a hiatus of 3 years, both due to general changes in fandom and fanzines, and a loss of energy or interest by the original organisers. There was a rec.arts.sf.fandom discussion in 1998, where Bernie Peek posted:

The Ken MacIntyre [sic!] award is in an even worse state [than the Doc Weir Award discussed originally]. It wasn't mentioned in the con publications this year [later corrected as it was in PR3] and wasn't awarded. The award was originally intended to be for fanzine art. The conditions laid down for choosing the recipient makes it very difficult to administer. Because it's theoretically possible to meet the conditions, no Eastercon feels that it has the authority to change the rules.

As noted, the 1998 committee was interested in presenting it, but their trial balloon in PR3 did not elicit sufficient response.

Bridget Hardcastle replied:

We tried to administer the Ken MacIntyre [sic!] award at the 1996 Eastercon. Both the original and the published form of the artwork need to be displayed, and must be judged by a panel of five people […] Ken Slater and Rog Peyton were two of the judges in 1996 - one of them was keen for the award to be revived and publicised to encourage more entrants, the other thought it might be better if it died quietly. We could not award the prize that year, as there was only one entrant.

John Dallman mentioned "a small fanzine I did about it" in 1997, and another re-post by Dave Langford summarised most that was known by then.

Year Winner Reason Notes / source
1972 Jim Pitts cover of Balthus 2 Wrongly announced in Vector (62?) BSFA News column as Martin Pitt; error reproduced in the first version of Rob Hansen's THEN. Erratum note in Vector 63. The Balthus 2 piece is named as the winning artwork in a Pitts interview in Dark Horizons 9.
1973 David Fletcher cover of Shadow 18 Reported in Checkpoint 37 and 38
1974 not presented According to report in Checkpoint 47
1975 Carol Gregory Reported in Checkpoint 61
1976 Paul Dillon Assumed from slightly garbled report in Tackett's Travels in Taffland; no mention in Checkpoint
1977 Jon Langford ?cover of Drilkjis 1 Year and win confirmed in Twll-Ddu 7, May 1977
1978 Steve Bruce
1981 Pete Lyon
1982 Rob Hansen
1985 Iain Byers cover of Wallbanger 9 Reported in Birmingham Science Fiction Group Newsletter 164, April 1985
1989 Jim Porter See next item
1990 Jim Porter Reported in BSFA Matrix 88, June/July 1990, as his "second year running" win
1991 Colin Johnston Illumination badge design Reported in BSFA Matrix 94
1992 Colin Johnston cover of Illumination program book Reported in Brum Group News 248, May 1992 (winner here spelt Colin Johnson)
1994 Barbara Mascetti the Stratmann wedding invitation Reported in Ansible 81
1995 Dave Harwood cover of Attitude 2 Reported in Ansible 94
1996 not presented "received no nominations" according to Ansible 106; just one recalled by administrators, see above
1998 not presented "still languishing in fannish apathy", as Ansible 130 put it
1999 Tom Abba Reported in Ansible 142, incl. the award being "formerly for fanzine art, now revived for 'unpublished artwork in Eastercon art show'"
2000 Sue Mason 2Kon Progress Report 1 cover https://news.ansible.uk/a154.html#01

Even the reform attempts, whatever they brought beside the relaxation of eligibility (downsizing the jury was discussed), turned out to be shortlived: the Paragon 2001 report in Ansible 166 does not mention the award at all, but Jay Hurst won the "Paper Tiger art show award", which Abba won as well in 1999. As this was presumably better sponsored and organised, it would have made the McIntyre's new definition superfluous.

Entry in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction


Award 19722000
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