Homes & Antiques

BEATRIX POTTER: DRAWN TO NATURE, VICTORIA & ALBERT MUSEUM

- Vam.ac.uk

OPENING 12TH FEBRUARY

To mark the 120th anniversar­y of Beatrix Potter’s The Tale of Peter Rabbit, the V& A has partnered with the National Trust to hold this familyfrie­ndly exhibition celebratin­g the life and work of one of the best-loved children’s authors of the 20th century. Visitors will wander into an immersive show that brings together Potter’s original watercolou­rs, drawings and manuscript­s, as well as some of her personal artefacts including letters, photograph­s, furniture and decorative art.

As well as a writer and artist, Potter was also a natural scientist, farmer and conservati­onist in the Lake District, bringing to light the places, people and animals that inspired some of her characters. As a young girl, Potter would study and record a wide variety of animals, birds and insects in her homemade sketchbook. The story of Peter Rabbit was inspired by a pet rabbit she had as a child, named Peter Piper. Potter had been painting for her own amusement for many years, but in 1890 she had her first commercial success with rabbit pictures she sold as Christmas card designs to Hildesheim­er & Faulkner.

Having become close friends with her former governess, Annie Moore, Potter regularly wrote picture letters to Annie’s young children; several years later, she turned one of these tales into a picture book. It was rejected by several publishers, so Potter privately printed 250 copies of it herself. The Tale of Peter Rabbit was a great success and, in 1902, Frederick Warne & Co agreed to publish 8,000 copies. They sold out instantly, and Beatrix Potter’s career as a storytelle­r was launched.

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 ?? ?? ABOVE FROM LEFT Peter with handkerchi­ef in watercolou­r and pencil, from The Tale of Benjamin Bunny, 1904; The Tailor of Gloucester endpaper, December 1903, watercolou­r, ink and pencil on paper; magnified studies of a ground beetle (Carabus nemoralis) by Beatrix Potter, c1887.
LEFT Picture letter by Beatrix Potter sent to Noel Moore from Heath Park, Birnam, dated 21st August 1892. Ink over pencil on paper.
ABOVE FROM LEFT Peter with handkerchi­ef in watercolou­r and pencil, from The Tale of Benjamin Bunny, 1904; The Tailor of Gloucester endpaper, December 1903, watercolou­r, ink and pencil on paper; magnified studies of a ground beetle (Carabus nemoralis) by Beatrix Potter, c1887. LEFT Picture letter by Beatrix Potter sent to Noel Moore from Heath Park, Birnam, dated 21st August 1892. Ink over pencil on paper.

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