Idol Of Lesbos Margo Sullivan -

But the most famous find was the one that would bear her name—the "Sullivan Idol." Unlike other Cycladic or classical figures, this idol was unique. It had no eyes (just two deep holes), its mouth was open as if singing, and between its legs was carved not a traditional fertility triangle, but a lyre—the instrument of Sappho herself. Fame came quickly. Sullivan published a slim, illustrated volume titled "Idols of Sappho's Isle" in 1927. The book was a sensation among Bloomsbury set modernists—Virginia Woolf mentioned it in a letter to Vita Sackville-West, calling the idols "primitive, erotic, and dangerously alive."

Her will was one sentence: "Bury me with the idols. They are my children. They are Sappho’s grandchildren." For decades, Margo Sullivan was a punchline in archaeology textbooks—the classic case of the "passionate amateur" turned forger. But the rise of queer studies and feminist art history in the 1980s began to rehabilitate her. idol of lesbos margo sullivan

The figurine was unlike anything from the Classical or Hellenistic periods. About nine inches tall, it depicted a woman with her arms outstretched, not in prayer, but in a gesture that looked strikingly like a theatrical bow. Her smile was asymmetrical—almost mocking. Around her neck hung what appeared to be a small lyre, and on her back, etched into the clay, were two Greek letters: (Mu Sigma). But the most famous find was the one