Geoffrey Shedley
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Geoffrey Richard Shedley (10 May 1914 – 19 August 1981) was a South Australian architect and sculptor.


History

Shedley was born in
Glenelg, South Australia Glenelg is a beach-side suburb of the South Australian capital of Adelaide. Located on the shore of Holdfast Bay in Gulf St Vincent, it has become a tourist destination due to its beach and many attractions, home to several hotels and dozens of ...
, the only son of Richard Gustav (later Richard Graham) "Gus" Schedlich (1886–1931) and his wife Louie Polmear Schedlich, née Maddern (1884–1949). Their surname was anglicized shortly after, during WWI. He was educated at St Peter's College, also taking classes at the
South Australian School of Arts and Crafts The South Australian School of Design was an art school in the earliest days of the City of Adelaide, the progenitor of the South Australian School of Arts, a department of the University of South Australia. Origin In 1856 Charles Hill started ...
. He joined the architectural firm of H. H. Cowell, and studied architecture at the School of Mines 1932–1936. In 1937 he won a competition for design of a low-cost pair of attached houses for the South Australian Housing Trust, which became the first of several designs for "austerity" family homes, which with inversions and other variations totalled 150 "Cowell home" designs, realized as part of Premier Playford's plan to convert South Australia from a dependence on diverse rural production to a centralized industrial State, by attracting young skilled migrants from the UK and Europe. :Apart from cheese-paring design and use of standardized, locally made, components and materials, much of the cost saving construction lay in the houses being complete to "lockup" stage, with bare floors, doors and window frames primed but unpainted, and bare ground for a garden, relying on the purchaser or renter for improvements as time and finances permitted. Shedley was registered as an architect in 1941, became an Associate of the Royal Australian Institute of Architects in 1946 and left Cowell for the Housing Trust in 1947, and was largely responsible for design of the satellite town of Elizabeth. He retired in 1974. He designed and helped build several private houses.


Recognition

The Shedley Theatre in Elizabeth was named for him.


Works of art

Shedley modelled the figures on the Elizabeth fountain at Windsor Green and the council chambers. He designed street floats for the
Adelaide Festival of Arts The Adelaide Festival of Arts, also known as the Adelaide Festival, an arts festival, takes place in the South Australian capital of Adelaide in March each year. Started in 1960, it is a major celebration of the arts and a significant cultural ...
in 1960 and 1962. He created the massive ''bas relief'' fountain sculpture ''Fire and Earth'', a feature of the pond at Windsor Green, Elizabeth. He created the sculpture ''The Rainmakers'', the first major public artwork in South Australia to depict traditional Aboriginals, sponsored by Eugen Lohmann of Remscheid-Lennep, West Germany, and unveiled at Christies Beach on 21 May 1965. While on overseas trips he purchased various works for the
Art Gallery of South Australia The Art Gallery of South Australia (AGSA), established as the National Gallery of South Australia in 1881, is located in Adelaide. It is the most significant visual arts museum in the Australian state of South Australia. It has a collection of ...
. His painting ''The Parable of the Blind Men'' is held by the Art Gallery of South Australia. Geoffrey and Mary Shedley were members of "Group 9", founded by
Dorrit Black Dorothea Foster Black (23 December 1891 – 13 September 1951) was an Australian painter and printmaker of the modernism, Modernist school, known for being a pioneer of Modernism in Australia. In 1951, at the age of sixty, Black was killed in a ...
, whose members included Lisette Kohlhagen, Mary Harris, Ernst Milston, Marjorie Gwynne, John Dowie and Ruby Henty, all members of the Royal South Australian Society of Arts. Shedley was, with his friend Dowie, a member of Adelaide's Savage Club.


Family

On 10 April 1942 Shedley married Mary Hackett, a fellow art student; they had three daughters. While living at Glenelg, he planned and built their family home at 12 Royal Avenue, Burnside. He died of a cerebral haemorrhage on 19 August 1981 at
Toorak Gardens Toorak Gardens is a leafy, mainly residential inner eastern List of Adelaide suburbs, suburb of Adelaide, South Australia, located 2 km east of the Adelaide city centre. This is one of South Australia’s most expensive suburbs. It is chara ...
and was buried in the cemetery at
St Jude's Church, Brighton St Jude's Church, Brighton is an Anglican church on Brighton Road, Brighton, South Australia. History The land for the church was purchased from John Alexander Voules Brown. The foundation stone was laid on 16 December 1854 by Lady Fox Young ...
.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Shedley, Geoff 1914 births 1981 deaths Artists from Adelaide Artists from South Australia 20th-century Australian sculptors 20th-century Australian painters 20th-century Australian architects People educated at St Peter's College, Adelaide