I
have to say that I’d been looking forward to this event all year, so my
expectations were a little overwrought. Last year the festival was so fresh and
unexpected that I had high hopes for a follow-up: inevitably, I guess, I was
bound to be a little disappointed. That’s the caveat that I’d like to offer going in on this review and any
readers out there should bear it in mind, before you think I’m being overly
harsh.
After
leaving Ironfest last year, my head
was on fire: this was something outrageous and innovative; it spoke of all
kinds of possibilities and adventures; it reeked of creativity and good times.
Good times, specifically, that I wanted to share with my friends. I hit the
soapbox and worded-up everyone I could find, telling them how much of a blast
it was. Everyone I spoke to responded enthusiastically and I made all kinds of
tentative plans to get together this year and share my experience: unfortunately, everyone piked, so I ended-up flying solo down to
Lithgow once more.
This
kind of underscores my experience even further for this year: in 2013, I had no
expectations and I was at a loose end with no local comrades; I was looking for
a diversion and this landed in my lap. This year, I had expectations – not only of the event – but also of being able
to share it with those closest: didn’t happen. In fact, I almost didn’t go at
all: but for the fact that sitting home alone would probably have started some
kind of downward, depressive spiral, I was all for blowing the whole thing off.
One
thing that prodded me out-of-doors was that I wanted to see how everyone
tackled the theme for this year, which was “Life on Mars”. Last year’s theme -
“Time Travel” - was tailor-made to support all of the anachronistic madness
that was going on: Napoleonics, Nazis, Vikings, robots, daleks... I felt that
this year’s theme was just as inspirational and capable of handling the
diversity of activities; I thought it would move all that creative energy in
exciting directions. Sadly, it didn’t.
Was
there a single reference to Edgar Rice Burroughs? Any playing of Jeff Wayne’s magnum opus? The faintest whiff of 1950s Cold War movie paranoia? No; not
even a red rock. Instead, the medievalists did what they do; the Napoleonic
dudes pitched their camp and carried on; the jousters jousted; the
belly-dancers ... well, you know.
In
short, it was business as usual. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, but it was
a bit of a let down. One thing that I did notice was the tendency for people to
just gloss over things by saying “That? That’s steampunk.”
No.
It isn’t.
Just
because you trick out your best cape and LARPing sword with a pocket-watch,
doesn’t mean it’s “steampunk”. Putting goggles on a hat doesn’t make it
“steampunk”. Squeezing into a corset until your boobs explode out the top is
not “steampunk”. As I’ve suspected for quite awhile now, “steampunk” is basically
a catch-all term for anything to do with cosplay and geeky fandom. It’s all
(dubious) style and no substance.
And
so, there was a crusader stomping around with an Iron Man mask on; a Warhammer
40K Ork with goggles; and any number of Goths (remember when Steampunks
used be called “Goths”?) with eyeliner running freely under their top hats.
Slap
a cog on it; she’ll be right. The absence of consideration or thought was
deeply stultifying.
(Of
course, there were even more people there who had no clue, but wanted to get in
on the game regardless. I lost count of the number of guys there in shorts and
thongs wearing a flag for a cape, wielding a plastic sword and chugging a
tinnie. Also, the guy dressed as a fluoro-green X-Files alien – and I know
it was a guy – should have road-tested his outfit before getting all sweaty in
it: that parachute-silk stuff gets quite transparent in the damp...)
The
market stalls were similarly lacklustre. There was a bunch called “Sydney
Steampunk” who were selling plastic Goth leftovers (50 bucks for fingerless
lace gloves anyone?) to the accompaniment of pounding Evanescence-clone heavy rock, with all of the four-letter words
included – right inside the front gate. Not a good look. Another guy right
alongside them was selling baseball caps and sunglasses (they’re like goggles, aren’t they?), with a
heavy hip-hop soundtrack issuing from his tent denouncing all the “bitches an’
ho’s”. Yet another guy shooed me away from trying to take a photo of one of the
Frilled-Neck Lizards he’d crafted from a handful of forks: what? Do I look like someone who steals craft ideas
to pass on to my hordes of metalworking associates? Given his high prices and
cranky ‘get away from my stall’ attitude, I’d be surprised if he made a sale
all weekend. Suck this up, Lizard dude: FRILLED-NECK LIZARD MADE FROM OLD FORKS
– RUN WITH IT METAL ARTISANS! YOU HEARD IT HERE FIRST!
So
much for the front door.
There
were other crafty types about the place as usual, many of them in the main
pavilion, with the smithy-types and their steam-hammer in the cattle-judging
barn (this all takes place in a rural showground, remember?). I recollected
that one stall was selling sturdily-made funky goggles last year, and I thought
I’d pick up a pair as a gift for someone: there were none to be had. Instead, a
range of shoddy plastic World War Two aviator-type goggles was on offer, with
equally-shoddy plastic Victorian-era-ish glasses as an alternative. Since
neither of these offerings started below $30, I passed on the whole deal.
(Strangely though, if I’d decided to lash out $30 on a faux-leather-lined army helmet – with or without horns, Captain
America insignias, spikes or fluoro-colouring – I could have had a set of these
goggles included for an extra 5 bucks. Hmmm...)
A
lot of steampunk “modding” was on offer at the stalls and not much of it was
good. I mean, if you’ve seen one lamp made of copper pipes and sewing-machine
light-bulbs, you’ve seen fifty; and there were at least that many here for
sale. One thing that is a hallmark of the modding process (or should be, I think), is that whatever
you make, has to work. On offer here were tables and tables of huge metal doorstops Frankensteined
together with hardly more utility. Kind of like Frilled-Neck Lizards made from
old forks. To me, if you break a perfectly good working antique camera in order
to make something that looks like it should
be a perfectly-good working steampunk camera-thingy but isn’t, means you
haven’t done anything particularly clever. Except for having made an ugly and
unwieldy doorstop.
(I
guess, a few years from now, when local councils are roaming the streets and
taking away the junk that people have put out for collection, they’ll find that
it will all have been conveniently welded together in lumps as an aid to
transportation. Upside!)
Wooden
swords and shields were another beef. Last year, there was one guy selling
these for the kiddies and, to his credit, he was barely keeping up with the
demand (he was churning them out on-site). This year every second stall was
selling these – painted; unpainted; with leather attachments; without. Every
other child was lashing about with a set, or crying about how their parents
were too mean to buy them a set. Given the ease of manufacture of these items
it’s easy to see why traders were so keen to get on the bandwagon. Lucky then,
that Frill-Necked Lizards made from old forks weren’t so popular (and yes, I do know how to hold a grudge,
thank-you!).
Going
in to the event, there was a lot of noise on the festival’s various websites
about how cosplay was going to be a big attraction for this year. Frankly,
nothing makes me cringe harder. Adults, badly dressed up as fictional
characters, has a certain attention-seeking desperation to it that can clear
rooms. Large rooms. I’d say “kudos” to the fellow who came dressed as the Beast
from X-Men (why not? Stick a cog on
it; she’ll be right!), because being spray-painted blue like that from head to
toe must have been truly irritating; but did it look good? No: not five minutes
after it was done; certainly not five
hours after that. Discovering that there were areas set aside for these people
to “perform” in was another truly horrifying discovery – I stumbled into one of
these zones and had to backpedal furiously to get out: adult human beings
dressed as generic “aliens” in full body paint, yodelling a capella pop songs into a badly-tuned mic before an audience of
steadily-chewing punters who’d innocently thought the room was a place where
they could sit down and eat their “chips on a stick”, has “SAD” stamped all
over it in 10-foot high letters. Seriously people: it’s not reality TV; you’re
not on The Voice. Get dressed; go
home.
One
thing you learn quickly walking around Ironfest
is that goggles and helmets do not positively enhance peripheral vision. You
learn to quickly sidestep oncoming cosplay types in order to avoid getting a
fascinator in the eye. Or a spiked epaulette. Often, reduction of a person’s
local awareness can’t simply be put down to creepy eyewear: the dress-up types
have a tendency to wander about adjusting themselves, or trying to catch their
reflection in the shiny merchandise nearby. We’re told that mobile phones are
detrimental to concentration; good thing, then, that the Romans didn’t have
them!
A
last observation: if your cosplay wardrobe is going to malfunction, work this
out before you show up in public. I’m
looking at you Green Alien Guy. And you, Steampunk Dr Octopus.
Moving
out into the centre of the showground, it was all plus ca change, plus ca meme chose, amongst the Napoleonic crowd.
This year, there were far more of them, with more cannon, and there were
Prussians, British Troops and a bunch of other nationalities too, all swanning
about and firing their muskets. I was impressed with these dudes last year and
I remain impressed: maybe all the leather and brass had been spit-polished
harder than usual but this year they eminently improved upon their previous
performance, one of the few aspects of the event to achieve this. To show my
support, I even bought a $2 Tricolour
to wave enthusiastically during the skirmishes!
The
Medieval Village was also larger and there were several additional features
which were nifty: there was an executioner with a chopping block running some “Horrible Histories” type patter for the
kiddies and – best of all – falconers with a clutch of very pretty raptors to
show off. Sadly, the wind was too boisterous, so flying the birds wasn’t an
option, but they were fascinating to observe regardless. That the guys showing
these pretties all worked for a conservation organisation hoping to increase
the numbers of these birds in the wild, was icing on the cake. I avoided the
jousting because I’m too long in the SCA tooth to be interested and, also, I
worry about the horses – they can get splinters in their eyes too, you know.
And speaking of SCAdians, there were more of them here also – in those pokey, unconvincing, “North Face” polyester tents wa-a-a-ay to the rear of the ‘Village.
Feh. Losers.
I
was bothered again by the archery: I’ve taught archery before and I get the
fact that it’s cool to let people try out the sport by renting a bow and six
arrows and pointing them at a target; but why is it “cool” to let them shoot at
wooden representations of domestic animals? To my mind it’s just provocation to
get some kid out in the Bush plugging away at a wombat with his dad’s
“borrowed” .22. I understand novelty targets; I don’t understand suggestive novelty targets.
Something
I did miss on the medieval front was the music. Last year there were musos with
instruments, strumming and puffing and madrigalling along; this year there was
silence. Maybe I just missed it, I don’t know.
Trundling
full-circle, I ran into the Nazi re-enactors and their World War Two peers from
other nations. Last year these guys were shifty and (somewhat understandably)
not willing to be photographed; their tents were in a huddle and requests to
pop in for a look around were met with a frosty eye and the
suspiciously-inflected response: “why?” This year, they were chatty and
welcoming; much was on display and there was a flourishing sense of
camaraderie. I wandered about trying to discover the source of this
transformation and it was immediately obvious: girls. Many more women were
involved this year than in 2013, all fantastic in Dieselpunk drag, and the mood
had definitely lifted for the better. There was some impressive war-machinery
on display here too, and the AIF re-enactors were firing their field gun every
half hour or so, to general approval.
Talking
of machines, I find that I am less drawn to the flaky elements of these sorts
of events nowadays and I find myself circling the automotive exhibits. The
steam tractors; the steam trip-hammer; the beautiful old Rolls Royce
automobile; the German World War Two motorcycles; even the remains of one-time
King’s Cross performer Madame Lash’s burnt limousine (destroyed in last
summer’s devastating bushfires which significantly rattled Lithgow) are all
much more interesting to me than a guy with a horny helmet and a rubber LARPing
axe. As usual, on this score, there was plenty to see.
Although
I missed (if there was any) medieval music, there was plenty else on offer (quite
apart from the bloodcurdling stall soundtracks at the front gate). The Lithgow
Brass Band were on hand like last year, belting out the golden oldies and the
Waratah Drummers put on a riveting display of co-ordinated drumming and
toy-soldier marching down the main street. The dance tent was non-stop, with
performances of belly-dancing, Irish and Highland dancing, boot-scootin’ and
even some Interpretive material: acts were on in timetabled blocks and the
non-stop extravaganza rolled along like (steampunk) clockwork from dawn ‘til
dusk.
Afterwards,
as I waited for the train to take me home through the seriously Martian-looking
post-bushfires landscape outside of Lithgow, I perused the brochure which was
my ticket of entry to the event. There, I discovered next year’s theme which is
“Gypsy Dreadnaught”. I suspect this a bit of a sop to the tarot readers and
belly-dance crowd, but really? I foresee that it will be an Abney
Park-meets-Stevie Nicks extravaganza, all sequins, airships and handkerchief
points. Oh well, at least I won’t be getting my hopes up!