Fildes was born on 13 June 1879 in London, the son of
Sir Luke Fildes, and the great grandson of
Mary Fildes. He was named Val after his godfather, the painter
Val Prinsep. He was educated at
Marlborough College and
Trinity College, Cambridge. He practised as chartered accountant and solicitor until the start of
World War I. He served with the
Coldstream Guards but after being wounded on the Somme he became superintendent of physical and bayonet training at the
Aldershot Command. After the war he went into business rather than return to law and became secretary of
Lever Brothers Limited. In 1929, he won the
épée title at the
British Fencing Championships. He retired from Lever Brothers in 1946. Between 1934 and 1967 he was a trustee of the Lady Lever Art Gallery and Collections at Port Sunlight. In 1968, as L. V. Fildes, he wrote a biography of his father "Luke Fildes R.A. A Victorian Painter" published in London by
Michael Joseph. It is based partly on his father's correspondence and the diary of his maternal uncle Henry Woods R.A., who lived and painted in Venice. In the biography he says remarkably little about himself, except that at Easter, 1914, holidaying with his parents at Lenno on
Lake Como, they met the sculptor
William Goscombe John, also on holiday with his family. Luke Val married Goscombe John's daughter Muriel eighteen months later in 1915. ==References==