10330

Mrs Frederick John Nettlefold, née Veronica Graaff 1931

Seated half-length, slightly to the left, head turned slightly right and looking to the viewer, wearing a blue and gold brocade stole with cream edge over evening dress, holding a string of green beads in both hands resting on a wooden table in front of her

Oil on canvas, 101 x 75 cm (39 ⅞ x 29 ½ in.)

Inscribed lower left: de László / 1931

NPG Album 1931, f. 23: Mrs. F. J. Nettlefold

New Place Hotel, Southampton

Frederick Nettlefold contacted de László in July 1929 after attending his exhibition at the French Gallery in London. He had particularly admired the dramatic portrait of the Marchioness of Milford Haven, née Countess Nadejda de Torby [3491] who had been painted in a dynamic pose with one bare shoulder, and wished his wife to be painted in a similar manner.[1] 

Mrs Nettlefold was an opera singer who performed under the name Vera de Villiers. Owing to the busy schedules of both artist and sitter it was difficult to find mutually convenient times for the portrait to be completed. The artist recorded in his diary on 1 and 3 April 1931 that he was making preparatory studies; however a preparatory drawing in the collection of a descendent is inscribed 1930 / XII [111633]. De László began painting in oil on 4 April when he described the sitter as “rather rough in appearance…but a great feminine charm about her.”[2] The sitter was pregnant at the time of sitting which influenced the composition of the portrait with her hands resting on the table in front of her.

According to the artist’s diary there were six further sittings.[3] The portrait must have been completed in mid-May as de László wrote to the sitter on 19 May that the paint was not yet dry enough for it to be sent to Paris to be included in his exhibition at the Charpentier Gallery.[4] The letter also notes that the picture was framed and glazed by Emile Remy and photographed by Paul Laib [5994]. The honorarium for the portrait was £840 and this was paid on 16 June 1931 nearly two years after it was commissioned.[5]

Johanna Véronique Graaff was born on 26 September 1891 in South Africa, the daughter of Sir Jacobus Arnoldus Combrinck Graaff (1863-1927) and his wife Susan Theunissen (1881-1952). Graff  was a member of the Senate of the Union of South Africa (1910-1927).

She married her first husband Dr Pieter Michiel Daneel at an unknown date. As Vera de Villiers, the sitter gained international recognition as a contralto opera singer and performed throughout Britain. In 1925 she married her second husband Frederick John Nettlefold (1867-1949), actor manager and member of the Nettlefold industrial family, in 1925. There were three children of the marriage: Mary (born 1926), Frederick (born 1927) and Dorothy (born 1931). They were divorced in 1945 and she married Albert Coates (1881-1953), English orchestral conductor and composer. The couple moved to South Africa and formed a pioneering opera group there. The sitter was singer / director until her husband’s death in 1953. She survived him by twenty years, dying in 1973, and is buried in Cape Town.

PROVENANCE:

By descent in the family of the sitter;

Wooley & Wallis, Salisbury, 4 June 2014, lot 129

LITERATURE:

•DLA078-0094, letter from de László to F J Nettlefold, 18 July 1929  

•DLA078-0090, letter from F J Nettlefold to de László, 25 October 1929  

•DLA078-0078, letter from FJ Nettlefold to de László, 16 June 1931  

László, Philip de, 1931 diary, private collection

KF 2023


[1] DLA078-0094, op cit.

[2] László, Philip de, 1931 diary, 4 April entry, op. cit.

[3] László, Philip de, 1931 diary, 5, 8, 9, 10, 23, and 25 April entries and 1 May entry, op. cit. 

[4] DLA078-0090, op cit.

[5] DLA078-0078, op cit., The equivalent of approximately £38,500 in 2023