Bartow artist creates intricate pieces with thousands of little scratches

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Florida artist creates unique art one 'scratch' at a time

Artist Tifane Worsley immediately became addicted to the craft of scratchboard art. FOX 13 photojournalist Barry Wong shows us some of her work.

Artist Tifane Worsley immediately became addicted to the craft of scratchboard art. 

"It's very meticulous, and I have to completely zone in on it, which really helps me just decompress, relax," Worsley said. "The fastidiousness of it I love."

Dig deeper:

Her addiction began after taking a class 18 months ago. Worsley explains that scratchboard art involves removing India ink, a staining agent, layer by layer off of a clay board. It's the opposite of an artform like painting, where you are adding materials. In scratchboard art, you remove them. 

"It's a bunch of little hash marks, just little line by line by line. Sometimes you're putting them on across each other. Sometimes you're doing the hairlines," Worsley said. There's a lot of different forms you can use."

Like many other scratchboard artists, the repetitive nature of the craft serves as therapy for Worsley. Her first piece, a small bumblebee, won a third-place award at a Lakeland Arts Association show "Express Yourself." 

She's currently working a on a piece featuring moose in the wild. 

"It's the weight of your hand, the weight of a blade value system. For the lighter stuff, I literally just ever so lightly graze the top of the surface and that gives us a gray," Worsley said. "Whenever I know it's going to be white, like the whitest of the whites, I push down hard and dig really deep to get that effect."

Color is added after the scratches, and sometimes she will have to re-scratch the areas to clean them up. 

What they're saying:

Worsley primarily creates pieces featuring animals, thanks to a previous job at a sanctuary.

"I hope that it takes them to the animal that I'm working on, the scenery that I am working on," Worsley said. "I hope it makes them want to take a closer look to stand right up next to that piece and see the individual lines and just invest more time than just walking by."

What's next:

Worsley has created a handful of pieces. When she has completed more, her goal is to have a solo exhibition. 

The Source: FOX 13 photojournalist Barry Wong gathered the information for this story.

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