ABSTRACT
LINES
Chants and Prayers
WHEN ABSTRACT LINES are organized in repetition, they
make a visual and physical echo that touches some deep
part of the human spirit. This takes a form in most cultures.
Visually, it is found in the regularity of ordered lines or a
pattern. In music it can be felt in the diversity of plainsong
and African drumming, for example. These photographs
document the meditative drawings of two women living
worlds apart in different countries, cultures, centuries, and
circumstances. In the late 19th century, Marie Lieb was a
psychiatric patient in the Heidelberg Asylum, Germany. She
tore cloth into strips and used these to draw patterns and
symbols on her cell floor. Opposite, an anonymous woman
in the southeast Indian state of Tamil Nadu makes a ritual
drawing on the brick courtyard of her home, dipping her
fingers into a pot of rice flour. It will protect the place from
evil and make a pleasing invitation to good spirits.
MARIE LIEB
Little is known of this woman for whom the act
of drawing was essential. Lieb is one of countless
thousands of "Outsider" artists—diverse individuals
including ordinary citizens, social outcasts, and
sufferers of psychiatric illnesses—who have always
existed, making objects and images outside of
mainstream culture.
Torn cloth This is one of two published photographs showing
Marie Leib's torn cloth strips significantly placed on her cell
floor. Cloth is the simple instrument with which she has
conducted and ordered her universe. Compositional rightness
(see pp.228-29) has been adjusted with each movement
of the rags to draw a cosmos of balance and perfection.
Cell Floor With Torn Strips of Cloth
1894
MARIE LIEB