24 year-old Illustrator
Clients: Childish Gambino, Angry Birds,
Game Informer, Tomb Raider, EMI Records,
MSNBC, Warner Music, FX Network and more.
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414 posts tagged Sam Spratt
“Dwight Schrute: Bears, Beets, & Battlestar Galactica” - by Sam Spratt
With The Office ending tonight, I felt it was appropriate to bring back this illustration I did a couple years ago.
“Bond” - Portrait by Sam Spratt
I’ve been going just a bit crazy bouncing between client projects for… well awhile now… but I’ve got a few days before things go back to insanity and a good ‘ol fashioned portrait of Daniel Craig seemed like a great way to refresh.
I’ve been on a binge of back-to-back-to-back….to-back projects but had a break today during client approval so I started sketching out this little guy… I made it about 2 hours before workaholism kicked in and filled out my next few weeks with a few more “backs”.
Good news: cool projects. Bad news: no new artsiness for awhile.
Update: muscles.
Normally, I feel that whenever I answer questions here, whatever perspective I have to offer will suffice, but this one left me with a laundry list of opinions, most of which conflicted with one another. While it would probably be most expected for me to think that art can change the world, and it’s other professions that serve a more tangible purpose that would look down on art as a career choice – if I’m being honest, my gut feeling was that me deciding to become an artist and continuing to be one IS incredibly selfish and narcissistic. Even when I engage with people considering following a similar career path, my words of encouragement boil down to “I love what I do, it fulfills me immensely”. From artist to artist, that’s exactly what you’d expect, but suddenly I considered the possibility that all of my artistic “advice” was just perpetuating a cycle of selfishness – encouraging people to pursue things only to make themselves happy. Having an impact on the world was never even a consideration, I just… like making things.
Is what I do, is what all artists do, just for themselves? Are we really just choosing a path that puts a smile on our faces when we should be picking careers that tangibly assist people? I was at a loss. I knew that I lacked the proper perspective to answer this question in full on my own.
Thankfully, two of my brothers happen to be in fairly interesting careers that contrast my own as an illustrator: a Doctor and a Rabbi. While we sat around a coffee table in Manhattan eating Thai food — my niece running around in circles holding a Superman action figure, and my 6 month old nephew smiling in a dapper baby outfit while he happily filled his diaper – I broached the question to see what two people who respectively save lives and save souls, would have to say about this. However, unlike myself, they almost immediately dismissed it as absurd.
The narcissism and selfishness was one of the first things they tried to dismantle — saying every profession, no matter how seemingly noble by label, attracts people who do it entirely for themselves, a doctor being no exception. I argued back saying that in these instances though, regardless of the reasons FOR pursuing these practical professions, a doctor still saves lives.
Next on the chopping block, they dissected the notion that artists have no real impact on the world. There were a slew of very expected and easily rebuked statements thrown around. When I told my Rabbi brother that the impact he has on his congregation and community is deep, profound, instantaneously noticeable, and that I don’t have a damn clue whether anything I’ve ever made has affected anyone, he was just his usual humble self and in denial of that fact. But my other brother said something that if there were ever a statement that gave any sort of real answer to a question layered with so many existential onion rings, I felt this was it. He said, and I’m paraphrasing here, “Sam, just look at history, Doctors, Engineers, and Scientists are the people who have an impact in the world and matter the most? If anything you could make a strong argument that these are the professions that are extraneous. Art pre-dates medicine, science, and engineering by very wide margins. Art has grown and expanded exponentially throughout history, it has transformed language and sold belief systems to entire nations. I gain more from looking at a beautiful painting or listening to good music than I ever do from how something is engineered. I mean even on a really basic level of what I do, without artists, what the hell would us doctors learn from? You have no idea how much the field of medicine relies on illustration.”
I didn’t have an argument for that. It was historically sound.
While I’m not sure that I have a definitive answer to your question, after filling my perspective and knowledge gaps from my brothers, I will say this: It’s a slippery slope to say that artists don’t impact the world. Art’s effects may not be as tangible as the aforementioned career alternatives, but it’s still around, broader and more widespread than ever, permeating ever facet of our human-made world. Its effects may not be as quantifiable as how many years a Doctor has kept a person alive, but as most doctors will tell you, quantity of life is not nearly as valuable as the quality of it, yet their job demands that they deliver the number over the experience.
Art demands nothing, we just make it. We express, we depict, and we rage on whether or not our impact can be put into numbers.
If you live in New Hampshire or make a habit of road-tripping for art lectures, I’ll be giving one this Friday at the New Hampshire Institute of Art. It’ll be a brisk 40 minutes of artsy goodness followed by a Q&A.
Bonus: I’ll be sharing a process painting video that I’ve never shared online.
I will also be giving the same lecture tomorrow in front of my bathroom mirror, but that one is VIP only.
“Jeff Goldblum sketch” - by Sam Spratt
Another smaller sketch to break from my big painting.
Peter Dinklage sketch - by Sam Spratt
I’m working on an illustration that will likely take upwards of 100 hours to finish, but in the meantime, I’m determined to take breaks and do some smaller sketches like this. On a related note, this cello cover of the Game of Thrones opening theme song is awesome if you haven’t heard it.
Blood Brother Poster - Illustration by Sam Spratt
I illustrated the poster for the winner of Best Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. It’s a gorgeous and refreshingly self-aware film that I’m happy to be a part of in some small way. It will be making its way around, but I believe the next upcoming screening will be at Sundance London — so you should see these plastered around if you’re in the area.
Blood Brother Poster - Illustration by Sam Spratt
I illustrated the poster for the winner of Best Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. It’s a gorgeous and refreshingly self-aware film that I’m happy to be a part of in some small way. It will be making its way around, but I believe the next upcoming screening will be at Sundance London — so you should see these plastered around if you’re in the area.
“Mary” - Illustration by Sam Spratt
I’ll spare you any debatably clever hijinks to trick you with today, BUT I do have this finished portrait of Mary I’ve been working on for awhile. Though I can’t say religion ever hit home on a personal level, it was those biblical portraits/vignettes (especially from the 15-1600s) that went along with it which got me hooked on painting.
My portrait of the Virgin should be done by tomorrow, here’s a snippet. Also, on Tuesday I’ll get to reveal the poster I painted for the Sundance Film Festival Best Documentary-winning movie, Blood Brother, which I’m fairly excited about.
SAM SPRATT’S SIGNED TOMB RAIDER DEV EDITION PRINT GIVEAWAY!
In short: Likes and Reblogs of this image are each entries to win it. Giveaway ends in 1 week. Ships worldwide. You can also enter on Facebook.
In slightly less short: I have a couple 18”x24” prints of the poster I made commissioned by Crystal Dynamics and I’d like to give one away. Only myself and the developers of the game itself have this gold foiled “Dev Team Edition” but if you’re not a gambling person, the normal limited edition is on sale HERE
I might even have a few left over prints of some other works for runner-ups as well…
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