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Title:
Study of mushrooms
Object name(s):
Watercolour
Brief description:
A drawing in landscape format with three finished studies of brownish mushrooms and two smaller, less finished studies. In watercolour over pencil with white highlights in gouache.
Collection:
Victoria and Albert Museum
Associated concept:
Watercolours
Associated concept:
Science
Associated concept:
Woman Artist
Content - concept:
fungi
Content - concept:
natural history
Content - concept:
mushroom
Content - description:
mycology
Credit line:
Linder Bequest [plus object number; written on labels on the same line as the object number]
Current reproduction location:
https://framemark.vam.ac.uk/collections/2020ML3515/full/!100,100/0/default.jpg
Location type:
Thumbnail
Dimension:
Height
Dimension measured part:
sheet
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
19.5
Dimension:
Width
Dimension measured part:
sheet
Dimension measurement unit:
cm
Dimension value:
26
Inscription content:
'Amanita Asper'
Inscription interpretation:
inscribed on mount (now detached) by another hand
Material:
pencil
Material:
paper (fiber product)
Material:
watercolour (paint)
Object history note:
Drawn by Beatrix Potter, probably in the period 1887-1901. Acquired by the V&A from Leslie Linder (1904-1973) in 1973 as part of the Linder Bequest, a collection of ca. 2150 watercolours, drawings, literary manuscripts, correspondence, books, photographs, and other memorabilia associated with Beatrix Potter and her family.
Object name:
Watercolour
Object number:
BP.355
Object production date:
ca.1887-1901
Date - association:
drawn
Date - earliest / single:
1882-01-01
Date - latest:
1901-12-31
Object production person:
Beatrix Potter
Person's association:
artist
Object status:
Unique
Other number:
LB.289
Other number type:
Linder Bequest catalogue no.
Physical description:
A drawing in landscape format with three finished studies of brownish mushrooms and two smaller, less finished studies. In watercolour over pencil with white highlights in gouache.
Reproduction number:
2020ML3515
Responsible department/section:
NAL
Technique:
watercolour painting (technique)
Technique:
watercolour and gouache over pencil on paper
Text reason:
Collections online record
Text:
Beatrix Potter (1866-1943) is one of the world's best-loved children's authors and illustrators. She wrote the majority of the twenty-three Original Peter Rabbit Books between 1901 and 1913. The Tale of Peter Rabbit (Frederick Warne, 1902) is her most famous and best-loved tale. Beatrix Potter was deeply interested in natural history and as a young woman became especially concerned with mycology (the study of fungi). She made hundreds of mycological drawings, many of which she bequeathed to the Armitt Museum and Library in Ambleside, the Lake District, after her death. This undated example of a fungi study from the Linder Bequest in the Victoria and Albert Museum probably dates from the period 1887-1901, when she is known to have been producing mycological drawings. In this drawing Beatrix Potter has used an opaque white for the highlights and speckles seen on the mushrooms shown here, identified as Amanita asper, otherwise rendered in watercolour. Beatrix Potter not only made careful drawings of fungi, but actively studied it. Her scientific paper, On the Germination of the spores of the Agaricineae was read at the Linnean Society in London, but was never published.
Text reason:
Summary description
User's reference:
Reference:
Hobbs, Anne Stevenson, and Joyce Irene Whalley, eds. Beatrix Potter: the V & A collection : the Leslie Linder bequest of Beatrix Potter material : watercolours, drawings, manuscripts, books, photographs and memorabilia. London: Victoria and Albert Museum, 1985.
User's reference:
Reference:
Hobbs, Anne Stevenson, and Joyce Irene Whalley, eds. Beatrix Potter: the V & A collection: the Leslie Linder bequest of Beatrix Potter material: watercolours, drawings, manuscripts, books, photographs and memorabilia. London: Victoria and Albert Museum, 1985. p.32; no.289
Reference details:
p.32; no.289

Persistent shareable link for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/9ab071c0-a37e-353a-a8f5-75e04d053a55

Use licence for this record: CC BY-NC

Attribution for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/9ab071c0-a37e-353a-a8f5-75e04d053a55, Victoria and Albert Museum, CC BY-NC

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