Past Exhibitions

Sonic Botany

Human Nature: Sonic Botany

Guillermo Galindo (b. 1960, Mexico City) uses composed and performed music, printed scores, and assembled instruments to investigate the politics of the human.

Nuestro Mundo

Nuestro Mundo

The two dozen paintings in this installation are the work of young adults ages 18 to 26 who are mentored by Art Division, a non-profit organization that trains and supports Los Angeles youth from underserved communities who are pursuing careers in the visual arts.

Visual Voyages

Visual Voyages: Images of Latin American Nature from Columbus to Darwin

"Visual Voyages" will introduce audiences to new understandings of Latin American nature from a range of cultural perspectives.

Blakes Paradise Lost

Drawn to Paradise: Picturing the Bible from the 16th to the 19th Centuries

Featuring 12 works from The Huntington's permanent collections, along with a number of rare drawings on loan from the J. Paul Getty Museum, this installation explores the profound importance of the biblical Creation narrative in early modern visual culture, as well as the diversity of its depiction.

Octavia E. Butler: Telling My Stories

A new exhibition opening this spring examines the life and work of celebrated author Octavia E. Butler (1947-2006), the first science fiction writer to receive a prestigious MacArthur "genius" award and the first African American woman to win widespread recognition writing in that genre. Butler's literary archive resides at The Huntington.

Etching of debtors prison

A. W. N. Pugin, Prisons, and the Plight of the Poor: British Prints, Drawings, and Illustrated Books from The Huntington’s Collections

This exhibition examines the history of British prisons and how artists and architects documented the social, political, and legal tensions surrounding prison reform and Poor Law debates in Parliament during the 19th century.

Photograph by Edward Weston

Real American Places: Edward Weston and Leaves of Grass

A new exhibition opening this fall considers a rich dialogue between two iconic figures in American culture: the renowned photographer Edward Weston (1886–1958) and poet Walt Whitman (1819–1892).

Man in 17th century dress with mustache

A History of Whiskers: Facial Hair and Identity in European and American Art, 1750-1920

Facial hair has always been more than a matter of fashion. Impeccably coiffed or wild and unkempt, a beard or mustache says a lot about a man and who he aspires to be. This exhibition explores how facial hair styles were used to craft the identities of historical figures and fictional characters.

Artwork by Lari Pittman

Lari Pittman: Mood Books

Los-Angeles based artist Lari Pittman (b. 1952) is known for his exuberant, colorful, and graphically complex works. Huntington visitors can see the artist at his hallucinogenic best in this new exhibition.

Image of Grand Canyon

Geographies of Wonder Part 2: Evolution of the National Park Idea 1933–2016

"Geographies of Wonder: Evolution of the National Park Idea 1933–2016" depicts the unceasing public enthusiasm for national park spaces as well as the steady pace of changes in the concept of a "national park" that grew to include national lakeshores and seashores, wild and scenic rivers, battlefields, industrial sites, parkways and trails.

Origami orchid

flORIlegium: Folded Transformations from the Natural World by Robert J. Lang

The Japanese art of origami comes alive in a new exhibition of approximately 25 original works by the internationally renowned master Robert Lang.

Chinese woodblock print

Gardens, Art, and Commerce in Chinese Woodblock Prints

This major international loan exhibition explores the art, craft, and cultural significance of Chinese woodblock prints made during their golden age, from the late 16th through the 19th century.