Olivia Musgrave was born in Dublin to an Irish father and Greek mother. Her work is taken both from life and from the imagination where she draws inspiration from Greek mythology, as well as influences from 20th Century Italian sculptors most notably Marino Marini.
This trio of sculptures are Musgrave’s take on the three goddesses of fate who personify the inescapable destiny of humankind. According to Greek mythology, the Fates assigned to every person his or her fate.
- Clotho was the "the spinner," who spun the thread of life
- Lachesis (la·kuh·suhs) was the “apportioner of lots” who measured it
- Atropos was the goddess who cut it short.
Reminiscent of the monolithic human heads carved by the Rapa Nui people on Easter Island, Musgrave’s Fates have a sense of timelessness and peacefulness - indeed a calm resignation to their inescapable fate.
Olivia Musgrave was born in Dublin to an Irish father and Greek mother. Her work is taken both from life and from the imagination where she draws inspiration from Greek mythology, as well as influences from 20th Century Italian sculptors most notably Marino Marini.
This trio of sculptures are Musgrave’s take on the three goddesses of fate who personify the inescapable destiny of humankind. According to Greek mythology, the Fates assigned to every person his or her fate.
- Clotho was the "the spinner," who spun the thread of life
- Lachesis (la·kuh·suhs) was the “apportioner of lots” who measured it
- Atropos was the goddess who cut it short.
Reminiscent of the monolithic human heads carved by the Rapa Nui people on Easter Island, Musgrave’s Fates have a sense of timelessness and peacefulness - indeed a calm resignation to their inescapable fate.
Olivia Musgrave was born in Dublin to an Irish father and Greek mother. Her work is taken both from life and from the imagination where she draws inspiration from Greek mythology, as well as influences from 20th Century Italian sculptors most notably Marino Marini.
This trio of sculptures are Musgrave’s take on the three goddesses of fate who personify the inescapable destiny of humankind. According to Greek mythology, the Fates assigned to every person his or her fate.
- Clotho was the "the spinner," who spun the thread of life
- Lachesis (la·kuh·suhs) was the “apportioner of lots” who measured it
- Atropos was the goddess who cut it short.
Reminiscent of the monolithic human heads carved by the Rapa Nui people on Easter Island, Musgrave’s Fates have a sense of timelessness and peacefulness - indeed a calm resignation to their inescapable fate.
OLIVIA MUSGRAVE, Hungry Goat, 2014
Bronze, 38.5 x 28 x 18 cm (15 1/8 x 11 x 7 1/16 in.)
Edition of 9
OLIVIA MUSGRAVE, Small Horse
Bronze, 22 x 23 x 7.5 cm (8 5/8 x 9 x 2 15/16 in.)
Edition of 9
OLIVIA MUSGRAVE, Cavalcade
Bronze, 53 x 62 x 20 cm
Ideas for sculptures often come unexpectedly and without warning or they sometimes grow on me over time. ‘Cavalcade’ emerged as I was leaving the British Museum after an early morning Private View. I always try and pay a visit to the Parthenon Marbles if I
am there, but on this occasion I was the only person in the gallery, just before the doors to the museum opened. The silence of that moment profoundly affected how I viewed what are, for me, familiar objects.
- Olivia Musgrave
OLIVIA MUSGRAVE, Crossing the Night Sky
Bronze, 39 x 59 x 15 cm
Olivia Musgrave's work is drawn both from life and from the imagination where she draws inspiration from Greek mythology, as well as influences from 20th Century Italian sculptors, including Marini, Martini, Greco and Manzu
OLIVIA MUSGRAVE, Home from the Pasture
Bronze, 40 x 44.5 x 24 cm
Olivia Musgrave's sculptures are not a literal interpretation and she has tried to reveal the life and relationships between the men and women and their animals. As with many mythological stories these things are often intimately entwined, something which has
formed a large part of her work over the years.
Specialists in contemporary art from South Africa. Established in 1913. South African artists are part of the global conversation. We seek to make their voices heard.