Born in
Murrumbeena, Victoria, Guy was the third child of
William Merric Boyd, potter, and his wife Doris Lucy Eleanor Bloomfield, née Gough, a painter, and thus was a member of the
Boyd artist dynasty. Brother of
Arthur and
David, both painters, Lucy a potter, and
Mary, a painter (who married first
John Perceval, and then later
Sidney Nolan, both artists), he grew up in his father's pottery. The Boyd family artistic dynasty includes painters, sculptors,
architects, writers and other arts professionals, and descends from Boyd's grandfather
Arthur Merric Boyd, Boyd's father
Merric and mother
Doris, uncles
Penleigh Boyd and
Martin Boyd. After the privations of the
Great Depression followed by a disastrous fire at his father's pottery, where he was assistant, in 1937 Boyd found work first as a jeweller's apprentice, then in a number of jobs, including at a nuts and bolts factory and as a builder's labourer. In 1941–46 he served in the
Australian Army Reserve, however as a committed pacifist he was deployed as a draughtsman in Melbourne and then at
Fortuna mansion in
Bendigo, before conflicts with his superiors resulted in his being posted interstate in 1944 to the 103rd Convalescent Depot,
Ingleburn, where he volunteered Examples of the injured combatants' work were exhibited in Sydney in 1945. ==Career==