Yolanda Sonnabend was a British theatre and ballet designer and painter, primarily of portraits.
Background
Sonnabend was born in Bulawayo, Southern Rhodesia (present-day Zimbabwe) the younger child of a sociologist, Doctor Henry Sonnabend, and a physician, Doctor Fira Sonnabend, both Jewish. Her father was of German descent and her mother was of Russian descent.
Education
From 1955 to 1960 she studied painting and stage design at the Slade School of Fine Artist
Career
They met at Padua University in the 1920s and emigrated to South Africa in 1930. Her brother Joseph Sonnabend, (born 1933, South Africa) later became a scientist and Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome researcher She settled in England in 1954.
She subsequently taught at the Camberwell School of Art, the Slade, the Central School and at the Wimbledon School of Artist
Sonnabend worked as a theatre and ballet designer for the Royal Opera House and the Royal Ballet, as well as Sadler"s Wells, the Oxford Playhouse and Stuttgart Ballet. She designed her first ballet, "A Blue Rose" by Peter Wright, in 1957 when she was a student at the Slade School of Fine Artist
She first collaborated with Kenneth MacMillan in 1963 on Symphony and worked with him for over thirty years, including Rituals (1975), Requiem (1976), My Brother, My Sisters (1978) and Valley of Shadows (1983). She was also a painter with Kenneth MacMillan and Physicist Stephen Hawking being two of her most noteworthy subjects.
She was the subject of three National Portrait Gallery portraits.
In 2000 she was awarded the Garrick/Milne Prize for theatrical portraiture. Nine of her pieces are in the collection of London’s National Portrait Gallery. A retrospective of her work was held at the Serpentine Gallery in London in 1985-1986.
She died in England on 9 November 2015, aged 80.