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Showing ‘what a woman has done’1: the Beatrix Potter collections at the V&A

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2016

Emma Laws*
Affiliation:
Word & Image Department, Victoria and Albert Museum, Blythe House, 23 Blythe Road, London W14 0QX, UK
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Extract

A woman artist of wide-ranging interests, Beatrix Potter is less well-known for her activities in sheep farming, natural science and the preservation of the Lakeland countryside than for her much-loved children’s books, especially The tale of Peter Rabbit. But Potter scholars and enthusiasts can gain a broad view of her oeuvre at the Victoria & Albert Museum (V&A) in London, home to the internationally-acclaimed original collection of Leslie Linder, the first curator and collector of her work. The world-wide popularity of the material gives rise to some challenging conservation issues that the V&A, in close association with Frederick Warne, is working to resolve.

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Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Art Libraries Society 2007

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