In 1987, the lesbian literary journal Sinister Wisdom devoted an entire issue to Sullivan, calling her "the patron saint of creative anachronism." In 1992, the Museum of Lesbian Art in Berlin acquired the original Sullivan Idol (the one with the lyre between its legs) and hung it alongside works by Romaine Brooks and Claude Cahun.
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).
After the war, she returned to Lesbos a broken, silent woman. She no longer carved idols. She kept goats. She died in 1952 in a small clinic in Mytilene, the island’s capital. The cause of death listed: "exhaustion and melancholia." She was 54.
That note was the first concrete evidence of the woman who would become the "Idol of Lesbos"—. Who Was Margo Sullivan? Margo Sullivan was born in Cork, Ireland, in 1898, the daughter of a British naval surgeon and a Greek mother from Smyrna. She was, by all accounts, a storm. She studied sculpture at the Chelsea School of Art before the Great War, then served as an ambulance driver on the Macedonian front. But it was her move to the island of Lesbos in 1922 that would define her legacy.