Sunday, November 9, 2008

I've decided that they are exorcists.  

Only, the demons don't get sent to hell, they
just get washed up, and are given a nice home.

Monday, October 27, 2008

hello kitty kat
...and penguin pirate, what are you doing here??Next to the green guy, this is probably my favorite one to date.  The body is a little crooked, and Penguin's wings are too small, but the cat ears peeking out surprisingly work as "feet."
I just wish the material didn't fray so much, because it moves like a dream.  

Need more floss...and thread that matches the material would greatly improve the presentation.

Saturday, October 25, 2008




This was the best result after trying upload all of these pages  four other times.  

The order is completely out of wack, but honestly, the plot is so minimal, I don't think it matters.  
What order do you think it should be in?

                                                                         This was a mini-zine I came up with for the Baltimore 

Book Festival last year.  

It was a lot of fun to research and it was the first time I had put a full length comic together, let alone one without complete English dialog.  

Needless to say, only
family                                                                       members bought copies, but I'm still proud of "Preevyet."





Thursday, October 23, 2008


Flip Doll #4

Estimated assembly time:

1/2 of "The Prestige" and 
3/4 of "My Own Private Idaho"









I didn't plan on this, but the devil horns also work as feet.  

Working with felt is so much easier and yields cleaner stitches with less fraying.  Next time I will put more effort into embroidery...and the arms.

  Flip doll #3--with handy face flap.

He didn't mean to overreact, he mistook you for someone else.  

















Possible project for Mt. Washington.
This didn't take me very long to make, so I'll come up with a couple other patterns that they can use. 

Is it sad that I made a mix cd for classes that might happen?  I'm listening to it as we speak.  


Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Yeah!  Vertical!!



I can't wait to upload Tobias' werewolf.  

Last week, I started teaching an after school program at Mt. Washington Elementary involving relief printmaking, or "stamp making".   Initially, it was a little alarming...considering a child stabbed himself five minutes into the class.    Soon, I realized that I'd be dealing with a room full of kids, aged 7-12 (when told at first that it would just be 4th and 5th graders) and they're all using knives.  The fear lasted about five minutes, thanks to Mom voice.  

Given it is an afterschool program, a lot of the kids don't want to be there, but everyone has at least tried it.  Today was the best session since they were able to print, some swapped plates with their friends and printed theirs.  Now the problem only is that they wanted to make more but we didn't have enough time.  

There's only one more session left, unfortunately.   This was the first time that I worked with my own lesson plan and selected my own materials.  It could be something I could easily get used to.   


Also, saw "Beautiful Losers" at MICA's Fall Film Series.  You should see it for Margaret Kilgallen---Margaret Kilgallen as she is working, more specifically.  She was so incredibly focused and engaged in her paintings and wanted them to be shared with the community, instead of antagonizing it.  I had seen an art book of hers a couple years ago and remember being impressed but actually watching her work, was inspiring.  She kept the whole film from getting horribly overblown.  

Poor Harmony Korine got a two minute segment on "Gummo", a couple of questions in the beginning, and random clips but he made them count.  But that still equaled more screen time than Jo Jackson, or any other female artists featured in the documentary.  

Bedtime now.  


Thursday, October 9, 2008

Just cock your head to the left and you'll get the idea.






"Harvest 3"  
Ink on bristol
2008

Friday, October 3, 2008

Both images are supposed to be horizontal.
That's how they were saved, anyway.  



"Harvest 2"
ink on PVC foam sheet

2008
This was supposed to be included in the previous post, considering all of the references I made to it.  Blogspot lied to me.


"Harvest 5"  
gel pen
2008

Introducing Our Ladies of Productivity

For whatever reason, I can't stop drawing them.  It started in June, I was drawing all day in order to get rid of an artists' block.  After more beer I'd want to drink in the afternoon, sketches of fat girls in gym class, clouds, stars and a telephone, these women came unannounced.  
The only explanation that I can come up with is that I had seen a little nun at the Italian Festival, who was dressed the same way and I was taken with how she looked. 
 When I was in Catholic elementary school, the nuns that I saw wore black.  Later, I found that this is supposed to signify that they are 'dead to the world' and are brides of Christ.  Seeing this woman who had taken the same vows dressed in white seemed so joyful and it made her look almost like a fairy.  
The facial coverings are a resolution for handling the face, because lately I haven't been satisfied with what I've been coming up with.  Also, I find it more interesting to draw and it allows me to convey their emotion through their body language, which is a new challenge. 
This is probably my fifth attempt, which I did during lunch at the Nautilus diner. 
The waitress made a comment while I was in the bathroom about how it reflects self-esteem issues.  Good for her.  I'd be lying if I said that this wasn't true, but in my mind, they're more of a parody.  
Someone had told me that good art reflects the worst aspects of the artists' personality, and I would have to say that I was running with that ball.  Not to say that my intention was to make GREAT    ART   but own up to my stupid little neurosis'.  These little ladies, sterile nuns specifically, are caught up in repetitive activity that they are convinced is meaningful, although it doesn't make any sense.  
Now that that is out of the way, their more recent incarnations are less deathly serious, and more angelic.  I'm adding younger girls because everything was getting to homogeneous.
There are even bunnies.  Bunnies don't need any explanation.

Welcome!

Hello, internet, my name is Kathleen Mazurek.  After dragging my feet for some time, I finally got a website together, so to speak.  Little Scratch is my artblog,  which I will update as often as possible.  My work is mostly drawing based, which then extends into printmaking--drypoint, relief and silkscreen more recently.  I like to think of myself primarily as an illustrator, given the figurative nature of my work and how a narrative takes part in the process.  Usually the images come first and a story emerges.   This is where the 'little scratch' comes from--scratches are the beginning of everything that I make.