Vera Stanley Alder | |
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Born |
Eglingham, Northumberland, England |
29 October 1898
Died | 26 May 1984 Bournemouth, Dorset, England |
(aged 85)
Occupation | portrait painter, Writer, Mystic |
Language | English |
Nationality | British/Danish |
Alma mater | Roedean School, Sussex |
Spouse | Roland Thomas Hunt (1943-1956) Aage Henry Wirenfreldt Larsen (1963-1984) |
Relatives | Sir James Marjoribanks Niels Bohr |
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Vera Dorothea Stanley Alder (29 October 1898 – 26 May 1984) was a portrait painter and mystic. She wrote several books and pamphlets on self-help and spirituality. She founded the World Guardian Fellowship.
Vera Dorothea Stanley Alder was born 29 October 1898 at Eglingham, near Alnwick, Northumberland. Her father David Julius Alder (born 3 April 1871) was Danish and her mother Sylvia Marie Stanley (born 12 December 1880) was English. Her first sister Karen, who later became a leading actress was born on 11 August 1901. Her second sister Sonya Patricia who married Sir James Marjoribanks was born on 20 May 1910. Vera was a fourth cousin of Niels Bohr, the Nobel Prize winner and atomic physicist. Vera was educated at Roedean School in Sussex until 1914 and went to the Slade School of Art in London in 1917 to study portrait painting. She also studied painting in Paris.
Vera first married Roland Hunt, a naval architect, on 12 June 1943 with whom she shared a common enthusiasm for esoteric subjects. They divorced on 23 May 1956. Roland later emigrated to California where he died.
On 16 February 1963 Vera married Aage Larsen, her Danish publisher; the marriage lasted until her death on 26 May 1984, in Bournemouth, where Vera was cremated on Wednesday 6 June the local paper noting that she had a 'wide ranging and exuberant interest in spiritual life'. In the early 1970s, she resided for a time at Acacia House, London, and likely presented lectures there.
Vera had a successful career as a portrait painter using both oil paints and pastels. In 1923, for example, she exhibited portraits of Lady Douglas, Lady Poynter, and Princess Tatiana Viazensky (granddaughter of Harry Gordon Selfridge) at the Lyceum club in Paris where she had a studio. In 1926 she exhibited portraits of Lady Beaverbrook and others in London, and in 1927 she exhibited at the Cercle Nautique in Cannes portraits of Princess Elizabeth of Greece and Denmark, Baron de Saint-Marc and the actor and cricketer Aubrey Smith. She became a vegetarian and wrote seven books, one of which (From the Mundane to the Magnificent) she described as a "spiritual autobiography." Her books have been translated into several languages. Her devotees include such widely divergent people as Elvis Presley,progressive rock musicians and hippies. One commentator described her as "A painter and mystic who was particularly successful in finding a way to join both technological and social progress with a mystic spirituality." Vera founded the World Union Fellowship, which later became the World Guardian Fellowship that published the Journal of World Guardians and which continued, after her death.