Martin Boyd
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Martin à Beckett Boyd (10 June 1893 – 3 June 1972) was a member of Australia’s most famous and prolific artistic dynasty, as painters, sculptors, potters, writers, architects, graphic designers, and musicians.
He was born in Lucerne, Switzerland, the youngest son of Arthur Merric Boyd (1862-1940) and Emma Minnie à Beckett (1858-1936). His siblings included the potter William Merric Boyd (1888-1959), and painters Theodore Penleigh Boyd (1890-1923), and Helen à Beckett Read, née Boyd (1903-1999).
Brought up in Melbourne, and trained as an architect, Boyd left to serve in World War I. After the war he settled in England and, apart from a brief period between 1948 and 1951, remained in England and continental Europe, dying in Rome on 3 June 1972.
Martin Boyd never married, but took a keen interest in the development of his nephews and nieces and their families, including potter Lucy Beck (b.1916), painter Arthur Boyd (1920-1999), sculptor Guy Boyd (1923-1988), painter David Boyd (b.1924), painter Mary Nolan (b.1926), and architect Robin Boyd (1919-1971), On his death he appointed Guy as his literary executor.
Martin Boyd’s writings included:
- Brangane: A Memoir (by Martin Mills, pseudonym), 1926, a novel based on the life of Australian writer Barbara Baynton.
- The Montforts (by Martin Mills, pseudonym), 1928 and revised 1863, a novel based on the history of Boyd’s à Beckett ancestors.
- A Single Flame, 1939, an autobiography.
- Lucinda Brayford, 1946.
- The “Langton” novels: The Cardboard Crown, 1952; A Difficult Young Man, 1955; Outbreak of Love, 1957; When Blackbirds Sing, 1962.
- Day of My Delight: An Anglo-Australian Memoir, 1965, another autobiography.
[edit] References
- Australian Dictionary of Biography, 1940-1980, Vol. 13, 1993.
- Brenda Niall, Martin Boyd: a life, Melbourne, Melbourne University Press, 1988. (ISBN 978-0-522-85131-1)