Victoria water lilies
Lucy’s first major independent project in two decades, illustrating the giant water lilies of the genus Victoria to show the unique features of the night-flowering genus. Around 2016, after over a decade of pen and ink illustrations (and the odd watercolour) for Kew, Lucy needed a project to call her own. After painting the world’s smallest waterlily (Nymphaea thermarum) Lucy became a frequent visitor to Kew’s tropical nursery and glasshouses, where she fell for the giant water lilies growing there.
The Victoria water lilies are found in South America. Until very recently, the genus contained only two species, Victoria amazonica and Victoria cruziana; the first growing along the Amazon River and its tributaries, the latter further south along the Parana River. However a third - Victoria boliviana has now been named. They are cultivated in many botanical gardens around the world, and are famous for their impressive giant leaves. Perhaps lesser known by the botanical garden visitor are their flowers, which open only at night. It was the flowers which first caught Lucy’s attention, in the form of an illustration by past Kew illustrator Walter Hood Fitch made in 1851. Kew’s Victoria water lilies had not been illustrated since, nor were there any detailed illustrations showing all the differences between the species. Here was a challenge which would allow Lucy to put into practice all of the skills learned during her time at Kew.
All images (c) copyright Lucy T Smith