Tuesday, 12 January 2010

Anna Pavlova, the Boyd Art Dynasty and Me - Tenuous Family Connections

Jug with Grapes 1915

Around 1900, my maternal grandfather bought four adjacent plots of land in the Melbourne suburb of Murrumbeena - one for his new home, one for a tennis court, one to graize a cow on ... and the last block he sold to potter Merric Boyd (1888-1959), who was known in the early C20 as 'The King of Australian Potters' ...

Merric Boyd in his Pottery at 'Open Country' 1914

'Open Country' - The Boyd Family Home and Pottery at Murrumbeena c1913

... and who was to become the patriarch of an artistic family dynasty - of painters (David, Penleigh and most famously Arthur, among others) and writers, such as Martin Boyd whose four-part series - including 'The Cardboard Crown' (1952) and 'An Outbreak of Love' (1957) - explored cross-cultural issues of the Anglo-Australian experience).

This sale of land lead to a long but tenuous connection for our family with the Boyds.

Merric Boyd's pottery combined the organic natural fluid forms of the Art Nouveau with the hand-made aesthetic of the English Arts and Crafts Movement, all within an Australian idiom and iconography ...

Pot, 1921

Vase with eucalypt, 1925

Pot with windswept branches, 1925

Vase with Apples, 1931

Jug with tree trunk handle, 1926

Form, 1931

Pot with koala, 1932

Lamp, 1931

Teapot, 1947

The joy of this pottery is, in part, its rough-hewn quality - as opposite to the refined finish aimed for in fine porcelain.

Now, the first incident in this Boyd connection that I know of concerned Anna Pavlova - quite a good start for a long-term relationship!

My mother tells of her very great excitement as a child when, in 1929, she and her sisters saw the legendary dancer arriving at the Boyd's house for a portrait sitting - a Wedgwood-like vase frieze ...


Pavlova toured Australia in 1926 and then again in 1929 ...

Anna Pavlova, Sydney, 1929

The next incident - in the early 1930s - occurred when Merric asked my mother to sit for him, producing one of his few earthenware portraits in the round ...


... another, ten years earlier, being that of his son Arthur ...

Portrait of Arthur Boyd aged three, 1923

The Boyds were notoriously eccentric - so there were other (many) more simply observed incidents, including removal of the internal roof supports to create an extra room (with rather predictably disastrous results) and setting much of the back of the property alight with over zealous kiln firing.

In the early 1940's, my mother briefly and unsatisfactorily dated Arthur - certainly another incident!

Arthur Boyd, 1945

The final-ish incident occurred when my parents married and Merric pottered them this beautiful inscribed vase as a wedding present ...


The only Boyd incidents these days ... are seeing their now highly priced art work in auctions catalogues!

7 comments:

  1. I love all the pottery..my favs are "form" and "lamp"..somewhere in me, I've always wanted to work with pottery and never had the opportunity,space etc.so I do appreciate what goes into making pieces like these..How MANY are thrown out for ONE perfect one?

    Cheers..
    Tony(nyc)

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  2. Absolutely beautiful, exquisite...as an artist (I do oil landscapes) who dabbles into pottery and sculpture I find these remarkable and inspiring. love this blog as I have always followed you enthusiastically.
    saludos,
    raulito
    http://fromtop2bttm.blogspot.com/

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  3. hey raulito

    thanks for the appreciation - i like to have a mix of things on the blog

    and you do pottery, as well as paint! i've done some pottery:

    - at school with a an artist who became a famous australian painter - john brack - he taught to give himself a regular income, earlier in his career

    - and more recently

    but in both cases, more to get a sense of the medium - i'm not being modest!

    as usual, good to hear

    best, nick

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  4. hey pointer

    yeah, the form work is great - obviously not particularly aiming at sale but experimenting with ideas

    love the lamp too

    and the first vase - for it's rough-hewn perfection - so beautiful the way the grapes wrap round and sit the body of the piece

    if my own experience is any guide a lot get thrown - in the second sense of the word - actually most of mine are given away as presents ... to unsuspecting recipients!

    you should try - i did a night class recently with a very patient and encouraging teacher - a great experience!

    take care, nick

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  5. hey ken

    i love the pottery cos it's not so high finish high street - it has a folksy approachable quality, which is what the arts and crafts movement was all about of course

    and yes art can give you a 'hard-on' - i know exactly how you feel! and kurt was posted as a blast from my fantasy past

    take care, nick

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  6. I love this Art Nov/naturlistic style of pottery, the first jug is my fav.
    Thank you, I enjoyed reading this post and what a wonderful life you have led.
    X

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  7. hey kev

    i love the first jug best too - which is why i started off with it

    i've been pretty lucky in the life i've lead - i think some of it has to do with being out there and trying to make things happen

    good to hear as always

    X

    ReplyDelete