News

What Sam Parker Learned Creating an Image a Day for an Entire Year

Sam Parker 010 麻豆视频 2023 01 11

Creating an image per day for an entire year gave artist and designer Sam Parker insight into exciting new avenues for his practice. (Photo by Perrin Grauer / Emily Carr University)

This post is 2 years old and may be out of date.

By Perrin Grauer

Posted on

The artist, designer and 麻豆视频 alum discovered a new voice, a new audience and a whole new future to dream about.

When artist and designer (BFA 2015) set out in 2021 to create an image per day for an entire year, his goals weren鈥檛 set in stone.

He committed to posting new work to Instagram daily for 365 consecutive days. He hoped consistent output would help him build a bigger online following. But other than that, his mind was fairly open.

鈥淭he main goal was to get better,鈥 he tells me over coffee in January. 鈥淛ust to improve.鈥

Sam works for an infographics company, and his data visualization skills were flourishing with regular practice.

鈥淏ut I wasn鈥檛 progressing creatively in my own artwork,鈥 he says.

The 365-day challenge was a way to bring steady focus to his creative pursuits.

Not only did he meet that goal, he gained insight into a whole range of exciting new avenues for his practice.

The challenge produced an extraordinary range of gorgeous images. Sam organized some of them around themes, including , and . He also created a month-long miniseries depicting Vancouver landmarks such as , and even an . Vancouver Magazine was quick to shine a light on the deep dive into the city鈥檚 quirks.

January 5 Duffins

The Jan. 5, 2022, edition of Sam鈥檚 year-long art challenge featured late-night fast-food mainstay Duffin鈥檚 Donuts. (Image courtesy Sam Parker)

But Sam wanted more than to be seen on social media. He soon began printing his images and selling them at weekend markets around the city. Paradoxically, these in-person events were the biggest drivers of Sam鈥檚 online growth.

鈥淭hose markets were where I saw my biggest influx of followers and the most hits on my website,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 saying hi, I鈥檓 talking to people, we鈥檙e having a laugh about Bon鈥檚 Off Broadway or going to Duffins late at night. And then people get on the internet and look at my stuff. That鈥檚 where I started to see more traction.鈥

Occasionally, things got a little stressful, he admits. He kept a running list of hundreds of ideas in a notes app to ensure he always had plenty of material. But some days, he ran out of time and was forced to post work he wasn鈥檛 happy with. And pulling prints together for weekend markets was often completed with only minutes to spare. Thankfully, those days were few and far between. And in the long run, the gains he saw far outweighed the disappointments.

Sam now feels much clearer about who he is as an artist. He also clarified what he wants to accomplish in the long term. He continues to post three times a week to Instagram. His online presence has begun earning him commissions. He has set goals for how much he hopes to earn this year from his personal practice. He鈥檚 got his eye on building his artwork into a full-time business. Now, he鈥檚 even dreaming about setting up a printshop to support emerging artists in the city.

Sam adds that these possibilities aren鈥檛 the result of posting to social media for its own sake. They emerged from the consistent focus required by the year-long challenge.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 count on the likes or the follows. You have to rely on your internal compass and ask yourself, am I getting better?鈥 he says.

鈥淪ome days, you鈥檒l have to post something you鈥檙e not proud of. But through that process you learn what you like, what you don鈥檛 like, what works and what doesn鈥檛. And out of that consistency comes opportunity, like selling work at markets and events or doing charity stuff. So, having that challenge to produce every day provides all sorts of weird dividends that you wouldn鈥檛 realize.鈥

Dude Chilling Park IG

Among numerous other cheeky Vancouver references, Sam spotlighted East Vancouver鈥檚 Dude Chilling Park. (Image courtesy Sam Parker)

But would he do it again? In fact, he tells me, he鈥檚 already working on another year-long challenge. He鈥檚 aiming to learn a new marketing skill each week to help him sell his work more effectively.

Initially resistant to the idea, Sam now sees the challenge as necessary.

鈥淎t first I was like, no, never,鈥 he says, 鈥淎nd then, as the months went on, I got closer to finishing the first challenge and I thought, I need to just eat the frog and learn how to market this stuff.鈥

So far, he鈥檚 about a week behind, he says. But he鈥檚 doing his best to go easy on himself. Besides which, even disappointment offers a valuable lesson.

鈥淚f you approach it the right way, disappointment is just a call for you to improve,鈥 he says. 鈥淛ust keep going. Don鈥檛 stop now. Just keep getting better. It鈥檒l happen eventually.鈥

and to keep up with his work.

--

Visit 麻豆视频 online today to learn more about the Visual Arts and Communication Design programs at Emily Carr.