A floral waltz in London's Kew Gardens
12.02.2025 | 16:50 |From February 1st to March 2nd, 2025, London's Kew Gardens will host its annual orchid festival, a vibrant example of collaboration between botanists, florists, historians, and artists. This year's festival is dedicated to the natural world of Peru. Visitors to this botanical paradise can escape the gray reality of the last month of winter and immerse themselves in the colorful world of Peruvian exotica.
Orchids are one of the most diverse plant families on our planet, with tens of thousands of species. The orchid exhibition brings together the variety of shapes, colors, and sizes of these amazing flowers, which grow on the ground, by the water, in trees, and even float in the air. Today, they are found on all continents except Antarctica. Most species are concentrated in the tropical latitudes, where they find the most favorable conditions for growth in areas with a short dry season and high levels of precipitation. The unique flora of orchids on different continents is a characteristic feature of their distribution.
In Kew Gardens, the aesthetics of flowers and other plants are closely intertwined with various art forms representing the culture of this distant country. This year, information stands, photographs, and paintings tell visitors about the indigenous people of Peru and the history of the study of this amazing country.
Compositions of tropical flowers include agricultural products, symbolizing the fertility and cultural characteristics of pre-Columbian America. Sculptures made from dried plants represent the animal world of Peru. The tour of the greenhouse, which tells about the Nazca geoglyphs, Lake Titicaca, and the cities of Cusco and Machu Picchu of the Inca Empire, is accompanied by traditional cumbia music in a modern arrangement by Pisco Disco.
ORIENT