Goya's black paintings

The fates

previous next

Masterpiece

Artist Francisco de Goya
Title The fates
Year Between 1819 and 1823
Technique Mural converted to canvas
Current location Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain

The fates

The fates

In classical mythology, the fates are three goddesses that control the thread of life. They are the personifications of destiny (or fate). The first, Clotho, spins the thread of life, the second, Lachesis, controls its length, and the third, Atropos, cuts it. They symbolize birth, the passage through life, and death, respectively. Traditionally, Clotho is pictured holding a spool, Lachesis holding a thread coming from the spool, and Atropos cutting the thread with shears.

In Goya's painting The fates (also known as The fate or Atropos), we see the three fates carrying of a man, presumably someone whose thread has just been cut. Clotho is holding an effigy instead of her spool, Lachesis a looking-glass or lens, and Atropos small scissors insteads of her shears.

The fates are goddesses, but there is nothing godlike or divine in these women. They have the same distorted, brutal faces we have seen in several of the black paintings.

The dreary, moonlit landscape serves to create a spooky atmosphere.

The fates
Buy a giclee print of The fates from Amazon



Home

Goya's black paintings
Mona Lisa
Masterpieces blog
Masterpieces of the Dutch golden age

Get in touch
Read my blogs
Sitemap
Guestbook