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Drawings of Animals | Drawings of Plants | Study of Fungi | Drawings of Insects

Beatrix Potter's first studies of fungi were painted in 1888, whilst on holiday at Lingholm in the Lake District. Over the next ten years she devoted many hours to her work, presenting a scientific paper on the germination of spores to the Linnean Society in April 1897, and although her findings were rejected at the time, experts now consider that her thesis was correct.

Charles McIntoshHelped by the Perthshire Naturalist, Charles McIntosh, whom she met in 1892, she painted hundreds of watercolours of all varieties of fungi. Indeed McIntosh praised her for the botanical accuracy of her work. Sixty of her paintings were used in 1967 to illustrate Dr W P K Findlay's Wayside and Woodland Fungi and collections of her work are cared for by the Armitt Library in Ambleside and by Perth Museum.




Courtesy of Perth Museum & Art Gallery.


Charles McIntosh, the Perthshire Naturalist who advised Beatrix Potter on her study of fungi.

Yellow GrisetteYellow Grisette (Amanita crocea) and Fly Agaric (Amanita muscaria), drawn by Beatrix Potter in September 1897


Fly AgaricFly Agaric (Amanita muscaria)









Courtesy of the National Trust


The Toads Tea PartyFungi sometimes appear in Beatrix Potter's illustrations. In The Toad's Tea Party, painted for the unpublished 1905 Book of Rhymes, toadstools appear as chairs and table.


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