When soulmates Janet Dawson and Michael Boddy moved from Sydney to a faraway New South Wales property in 1974, Boddy was clear about why: ‘Our marriage is one long conversation,’ he said. ‘We moved to the bush so we could talk to each other without so many interruptions.’ The pair nested there for some forty years.
In 1956, as an art school graduate, Janet Dawson won a National Gallery of Victoria Travelling Scholarship and went to study in London. Subsequently, she worked in a Paris lithography studio. When she came back to Melbourne in the early 1960s she ran the print workshop at the avant-garde Gallery A. She was, and is, a petite dark beauty, and the fashion photographer Bruno Benini used her as an occasional model.
Michael Boddy studied at Cambridge before coming to Australia for ten quid in 1959. By 1965 he was in Sydney, becoming the gigantic, high-spirited presenter of the children’s TV series Crackerjack.
In 1968 Michael and Janet married. That year, she was one of only three female artists out of forty included in an audacious exhibition of abstract works, The Field, at the new National Gallery of Victoria. Boddy set to work with Bob Ellis on the play The Legend of King O’Malley, which debuted in Sydney under John Bell’s direction in 1970. His next play was Hamlet on Ice, which featured many big names of the day. His Cradle of Hercules was commissioned for the opening season of the Opera House in 1974; it starred Jack Charles and David Gulpilil.
In 1973, Janet won the Archibald Prize with a portrait of Michael, in pink t-shirt and straw hat with a book and gardening tools.
Over their years at Scribble Rock, near Binalong, Janet painted and drew trees, clouds, vegetables and animals. Boddy wrote dozens of plays for young people and the couple set up a youth theatre group in Canberra in the 1980s. Together, too, they established the Bugle Press and published the newsletter Kitchen Talk. Before his time, Michael became a regular newspaper columnist and author on food, consumer affairs, natural history, sustainability and small farming.