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Merric was born on 24 June 1888
at Glenfern - Hotham Street, East St. Kilda, home of his paternal
grandfather John Theodore Boyd (St. Kilda Cemetery); described as a
“difficult child…a regular dunce” his childhood was in contrast to the
idealised Gilbert (d 1896) (Berwick Cemetery) (“the radiant,
irreplaceable, perfect child”) and
Penleigh (q.v.) (“brilliant beloved Penleigh”). He was educated at
Haileybury College and Dookie Agricultural College (1906-07) and by the age
of eighteen while “handsome and vigorous” he had “no liking for study and no
fixed ambition”; his parents purchased Tralee - a 143 acre farm at
Yarra Glen in the hope of providing a future but it “turned out to be well
for everyone except for Merric”. An epileptic, it wasn’t until the age of
twenty-two that he found the creative outlet natural to the Boyd dynasty and
went on to study drawing for a term at the National Gallery School (1910)
under
McCubbin (q.v.). It was while a student at the Gallery School that
he met Doris née Gough (q.v.); they married in October 1915
and produced five talented offspring of artists, potters and sculptors
including
Arthur (q.v.),
Guy (q.v.) and Mary (later Lady Nolan) who married
John Perceval (q.v.). “Idiosyncratic, mostly self-taught”, Merric
was the first of the Boyds to undertake a career as a sculptor and potter
which provided a creative outlet to his unpredictable and intense
personality and though his life was eccentric it was “emotionally and
artistically fulfilling”. Even though he struggled financially for most of
his adult life and relying on a small stipend from his parents (“where
Merric was concerned, nothing was too much”), he was able create an
extraordinary home in Open Country - 8 Wahroonga Crescent,
Murrumbeena (1913-64) (“indefinable, vaguely Bohemian style of aristocratic
poverty”) that became a creative haven for the wider family. Merric is
somewhat of a paradox: a pacifist who enlisted for active overseas service
(1917-19); he would allow the children to dress untidy with long unbrushed
hair yet insisted on politeness and rounded vowels; and while he detested
making money out of art, successful expeditions to the city to sell his
pottery were remembered with the happiness it would bring. Yet Boyd can lay
claim to being the first person in Australia to produce hand-made pieces; he
is rightly credited as the father of studio pottery for his highly acclaimed
decorative household pieces who strove to “merge the technical and domestic
aspects of pottery with the sculptural”. His health went into slow
decline from the onset of the Second World War (“very frail and vague…an
invalid”) and he died on 9 September 1959 aged 71. |
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(above) Open Country,
Murrumbeena
(Copyright Estate of Albert Tucker.
Courtesy Lauraine
Diggins Fine Art. By permission of the
National
Library of Australia, nla.pic-an23605138)

(above) Monumental
Headstone (enlarge
image) |