Minute by the Lord Mayor
To Council:
In September last year, Brian Sherman AM, the
philanthropist, animals advocate and entrepreneur, passed away peacefully after
a long battle with Parkinson’s disease.
I first came to know Brian, his widow Gene
and daughter Ondine, through the animal protection organisation Voiceless,
which Brian and Ondine founded in 2004. I soon discovered that Brian’s advocacy
for animals who had no voice was one of his many passions, which I shared.
Brian Michael Sherman was born into a
tight-knit Jewish community in Brakman, a small South African mining town.
While at university, he met his future wife, Gene. At the time, Brian was the
beau of one of Gene’s cousins. A relationship was forged that was to continue
until Brian’s death.
Apartheid was well-established in the South
Africa of the 1960s and 1970s. In June 1976, black schoolchildren protested
against the teaching of Afrikaans, a language associated with the apartheid
regime. Police violently put down the protests, with many children being shot
and killed. Encouraged by Gene’s cousin, Laurence Freedman, Brian, Gene and
their young family moved to Australia the same year, with just $5,000 between
them.
Brian soon got a job with the Bank of NSW,
now known as Westpac. He worked in the fixed interest department, where his
talent for investing was soon recognised.
In 1981, Brian and Laurence founded
EquitiLink, a fund management business, at Brian’s kitchen table with an
initial $5,000 investment. The Australian Financial Review later described
EquitiLink as “the first funds management company specifically aimed at
offering retail investors the kind of sophisticated products sold to
institutions”.
In 1986, they floated EquitiLink on the
American Stock Exchange, raising over a billion Australian dollars. Equitilink
was eventually sold to Aberdeen Asset Management in 2000 for $153 million, with
$5.5 billion under management, of which 55 per cent was in the United States.
In 1992, Brian was part of a consortium that
bought Channel Ten from Westpac for $230 million. According to the Australian
Financial Review, it increased in value to $650 million within five years.
Brian served on its board from 1994 to 2007.
Brian’s interests ranged well beyond the
world of finance. He served on the board of the Organising Committee for the
2000 Sydney Olympic Games and chaired its finance committee. He was President
of the Australian Museum Trust from 2001 to 2009, ensuring it continued to be
world-leading in its collections and scientific research. This was helped by
his being founding Chairperson of the Australian Museum Foundation and the
President’s Circle of donors as key fundraising vehicles. He was a director of
the Australia-Israel and Jewish Affairs Council, and chairman of the Rambam
Israel Fellowships program.
Brian shared Gene’s passion for art and
supported her commitment to Sydney’s cultural life. He was a director of the
Sherman Galleries from 1986 to 2007 and subsequently the Sherman Contemporary
Art Foundation from 2008 to 2017. Gene intended this Foundation to be a 10-year
project. In 2018, it transformed into the Sherman Centre for Culture and Ideas
to facilitate discussion about fashion and architecture.
Brian and Gene were also avid art collectors,
owning over 900 artworks. In 2015, they began downsizing their collection,
gifting works by twenty of Asia’s most important contemporary artists to the
Art Gallery of NSW. Other works were later gifted to the National Gallery of
Australia, the University of Melbourne, Sydney University’s Chau Chak Wing
Museum, MoMA in New York and Tate Modern in London.
In 2021, they donated their entire collection
of moving image and virtual reality works to the Art Gallery of NSW. They were
among the first people to support the construction of the Gallery’s Sydney
Modern, pledging $1.5 million to its capital campaign. A project gallery in the
new building will be named the Sherman Family Gallery. It was not their first
contribution to new gallery space. In 2010, they gifted $2 million toward the
new gallery for the College of Fine Arts (now UNSW Art and Design) in
Paddington.
Brian’s philanthropic endeavours were not
limited to supporting the arts. When his twin grandchildren were born with the
rare Allen Herndon Dudley Syndrome (AHDS), he supported study of the disease by
the University of Technology Sydney via the MCT8 International Research
Initiative. The Sherman Foundation made significant donations to UTS’s global
AHDS research and supported workshops for parents of children dealing with the
disease.
Inspired by Ondine’s passion, Brian supported
animal protection through their organisation, Voiceless. Since its
establishment, Voiceless has helped to significantly fund UTS’s animal law
courses, advocacy, and the Centre for Compassionate Conservation. Brian helped
found the first-of-its-kind with Ondine’s husband, the ecologist Dr Dror
Ben-Ami. The Centre conducts ground-breaking research across several
continents, with the aims of slowing extinction, resolving human-wildlife
conflict, eliminating wildlife trade and enhancing coexistence. Voiceless also
established the annual Honourable Michael Kirby Voiceless Prize for Animal Law,
awarded to the highest achieving student.
In 2010, Brian was diagnosed with Parkinson’s
disease. At first it was a private family matter, but Brian eventually took
steps to ensure his experience would benefit others. He worked with the Garvan
Institute of Medical Research, taking part in a powerful advertising campaign
to raise awareness and shared his experience in two episodes of Australian
Story.
In March last year, he published Walking
Through Honey: My Journey with Parkinson’s Disease co-authored with A.M Jonson.
The title was taken from a phrase Gene’s father had used to explain how he felt
when he, too, was fighting the disease. The book proposed “more experimental
approaches to treating Parkinson’s Disease”, advocating turning to the arts,
including music, art and movement, for therapy. He previously published his
memoir Lives of Brian: Entrepreneur, Philanthropist, Animal Activist, in 2018,
also co-authored with A.M. Jonson.
In June 2004, Brian became a Member of the
Order of Australia in recognition of “his service to the community as a
philanthropist and benefactor to a range of arts, education, and sporting
organisations, and to business and commerce”. Brian also received an Ernst
& Young Entrepreneur of the Year award, an Honorary Doctor of Letters from
the University of Technology, Sydney and with Gene, the B'nai B'rith Gold Medal
for outstanding humanitarianism.
At his funeral, Rabbi Jeffrey Kamins said
that Brian embraced his work to “improve the world with a fullness of heart,
mind and body, spurred on by … his fabulous success in business, achieved with
his incredible physical and mental stamina, his strategic insight,
self-assurance and dogged determination.”
Recommendation
It is resolved that:
(A)
all
persons attending this meeting of Council observe one minute's silence to
commemorate the life of Brian Michael Sherman AM and his significant
contribution to the animal advocacy, the arts and philanthropy;
(B)
Council
express its condolences to Brian's widow, Gene, their children Emile and
Ondine, and their grandchildren; and
(C)
the
Lord Mayor be requested to convey Council’s condolences to Brian Sherman’s
family.
COUNCILLOR CLOVER MOORE
Lord Mayor
Moved by the Chair
(the Lord Mayor), seconded by Councillor Kok –
That the Minute by
the Lord Mayor be endorsed and adopted.
Carried
unanimously.
Note – All Councillors,
staff and members of the public present stood in silence for one minute as a
mark of respect to Brian Michael Sherman AM.
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