The Boyds
A Family Biography
The Boyd family is Australia's most remarkable artistic dynasty. This 'family biography' by award-winning writer Brenda Niall traces the emergence of an extraordinary artistic tradition.
Awards
Queensland Premier's Literary Award for Non-Fiction 2002
Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Non-Fiction 2002
Shortlisted for the National Biography Award 2003
These were awarded to the hardback edition of this book.
Opinion
'With Niall as guide, the Boyds, past, present and future, could not have had a better biographer. This publication, handsomely produced with many illustrations, does them all proud.' (Michael Shmith, Australian Book Review, April 2002)
This review refers to the hardback edition of this book.
'One wonders how it's possible to write anything new about the Boyds, Australia's outstanding artistic family. Historian Brenda Niall . . . has done so, turning her scholarly gaze on the evolution of an extraordinary number of artists, potters, architects, writers and musicians.' (Mary Lou Jelbart, Good Reading, April 2002)
This review refers to the hardback edition of this book.
About this Title
The Boyd family is Australia's most remarkable artistic dynasty. Among the descendants of landscape painter Emma Minnie à Beckett and her husband Arthur Merric Boyd are talented painters, potters, sculptors, architects and writers, several of international standing.
This 'family biography' by award-winning writer Brenda Niall traces the emergence of an extraordinary artistic tradition. She places the Boyds in their historical and personal contexts, tells the interwoven stories of their brilliant careers, and analyses the shaping influences on their lives.
Most remarkable is the story, told here for the first time, of heiress Emma Mills--a convict's daughter who in 1855 married William à Beckett, son of Victoria's first Chief Justice.
Niall's narrative focuses on a sequence of Boyd family houses in Australia and Europe. This strategy enables her to shift the spotlight from one individual to another, and to show dramatic changes in the family fortunes in many different settings.
Beautifully illustrated, The Boyds is based on family papers, letters and diaries and a wide range of interviews. Moving from 1840s Melbourne to the present day, it covers a vast territory while reading with the ease of a novel.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Family Tree
Part One: The Matriarch
1 Arrivals: Convict, Judge, Squatter, Solider
2 The à Becketts of The Grange
3 The Boyds of Glenfern
4 Penleigh House
5 Tralee and Wilton
Part Two: Inheritors
6 The Boyds at Yarra Glen
7 'This House belongs to Penleigh Boyd'
8 Merric Boyd's Open Country
9 Open Country: Post-War Pastoral
10 Martin Boyd: the Search for Home
11 The Return of Martin Boyd
Part Three: Artists' Houses
12 Robin Boyd: an Architect's House
13 Robin Boyd: 'Under a Tension Roof'
14 David Boyd: a House in Europe
15 Arthur Boyd: Every House a Studio
16 Guy Boyd: 'Grandpa Boyd's House'
17 The Road to Bundanon
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
One of Australia's best-known biographers, Brenda Niall has won several major literary awards. Her books include Martin Boyd: A Life (1988) and Georgiana: A Biography of Georgiana McCrae (1994). She holds degrees from the University of Melbourne, the Australian National University and Monash University. She has been Reader in English at Monash University, where she gave courses in Australian literature, American literature, biography and autobiography; has held visiting fellowships at the University of Michigan, Yale University and the Australian National University; and is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. She now writes full time, and is a frequent reviewer for the Age and the Australian.

