Sure. There will always be subjective tasks where the person who asks for something needs to give feedback. But even there we could come up with ways to make it easier / faster / better ux. (one example I saw my frontend colleagues do is use a fast model to create 9 versions of a component, in a grid. And they "at a glance" decide which one is "better", and use that going forwards).
OTOH, there's loads you can do for evaluation before a human even sees the artifact. Things like does the site load, does it behave the same, did anything major change on the happy path, etc etc. There's a recent-ish paper where instead of classic "LLM as a judge" they used LLMs to come up with rubrics, and other instances check original prompt + rubrics on a binary scale. Saw improvements in a lot of evaluations.
Then there's "evaluate by having an agent do it" for any documentation tracking. Say you have a project, you implement a feature, and document the changes. Then you can have an agent take that documentation and "try it out". Should give you much faster feedback loops.