Marguerite Sirvins

1890-1957 · Saint-Alban, France

In a psychiatric hospital in southern France, she unravelled threads from old bedsheets and crocheted them into a wedding dress, hoping one day to marry. It has never been worn. It is unbearable and perfect.

The life

Sirvins worked in rural Lozère as a seamstress and farm worker before being admitted, in her forties, to the hospital at Saint-Alban, a place that later became famous for humane, art-friendly psychiatry. There she embroidered, made watercolours, and over years of patient unravelling and remaking produced the dress, thread by stolen thread, in hope of a wedding that never came.

The work

Embroideries and textiles culminating in the wedding dress, now one of the most moving objects in the Collection de l’Art Brut in Lausanne: a garment crocheted from sheet threads, halfway between couture and cobweb. It gets more powerful the longer you know its story.

Why we love them

One dress outweighs entire museum wings. Hope, worked in thread, at one stitch per heartbeat.

Go deeper

Kindred spirits

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