Most Recent
Lecture
The Founder and the Future: Becoming Henry Huntington
Wed., Oct. 23, 2019
William Deverell, director of the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West, explores the life of Henry E. Huntington (1850-1927) against the backdrop of American history. This program is a Haynes Foundation Lecture.
Lecture
Life and Times of Ethnobotanist Richard Schultes in the Amazon
Sun., Oct. 20, 2019
Noted ethnobotanist Mark Plotkin and cartographer Brian Hettler of the Amazon Conservation Team discuss the work of Richard Schultes, the 20th-century ethnobotanist, and share their new interactive map, based on the explorer's journals, that tracks his Amazon travels and offers insights into his
Conference
In America, Nineteen Nineteen
Fri., Oct. 18, 2019
The year 1919 was a tumultuous one in American history. It was also the year that Henry E. Huntington created the institution that bears his name.
Lecture
Recasting the King of Flowers in Late Imperial China
Thu., Oct. 17, 2019
Kristen L. Chiem, associate professor of art history at Pepperdine University, explores the role of floral imagery in Qing-dynasty China. Focusing on the peony, Chiem traces how artists used the flower to demonstrate imperial power during the 17th through 20th centuries.
Lecture
Locked in his Private Room: A Teenager's View of the Last Days of George Armstrong Custer
Wed., Oct. 9, 2019
Researcher T.J. Stiles describes the last year of Custer's life through the eyes of teenager Bertie Swett. Swett came to know Custer and his wife Libbie at Fort Abraham Lincoln and in Manhattan while America approached a historic turning point.
Lecture
“With a sincere hand and a faithful eye”: The Visual Culture of Early Modern Science
Thu., Oct. 3, 2019
Sachiko Kusukawa, professor of the history of science at the University of Cambridge, explores the many ways images served early modern science, from anatomical atlases and botanical illustrations to telescopic and microscopic observations.
Lecture
United by Lightning: The Transcontinental Telegraph of 1861
Wed., Oct. 2, 2019
Edmund Russell, professor of history at Carnegie Mellon University and the Dibner Distinguished Fellow at The Huntington, discusses the motives, construction, and consequences of the completion of transcontinental telegraph in 1861.
Lecture
Gardens as Ecological Theater: An 18th-Century Story
Thu., Sept. 26, 2019
Eugene Wang, professor of art history at Harvard University, discusses the Qianlong Garden in the northeast corner of the Forbidden City. Built in the 1770s, the whole garden space can be seen as a five-act play.
Lecture
Slavery Matters
Wed., Sept. 25, 2019
James Walvin, professor emeritus at the University of York and the Los Angeles Times Distinguished Fellow at The Huntington, discusses the widespread global ramifications of African slavery that transformed the cultural habits of millions of people.
Conference
Sincerely Yours, Wallace Stevens
Sat., Sept. 21, 2019
Wallace Stevens is regarded as one of the great American poets, yet he was also an inimitable letter writer. Leading international experts make the first concerted effort to study Stevens' letters as a major part of the poet's literary heritage.
Video
Nineteen Nineteen
Fri., Sept. 20, 2019
Organized around themes defined by the verbs "Fight," "Return," "Map," "Move," and "Build," the exhibition "Nineteen Nineteen" showcases items that embody an era in flux. Rare books, posters, letters, photographs, diaries, paintings, sculpture, and ephemera will be on view.
Lecture
In Conversation: Susan Straight: In the Country of Women
Mon., Sept. 16, 2019
Award-winning author Susan Straight is joined by novelist Lisa See for a conversation about Straight's powerful new memoir, In the Country of Women, which traces the lives of six generations of immigrant and multiracial women in her extended family.