Posted on Wed., Oct. 16, 2024

Alison Hirsch, associate professor at USC and the Shapiro Center for American History and Culture Fellow, discusses the history and future of Tulare Lake, which reemerged after multiple atmospheric rivers hit California in March 2023.

Posted on Tue., Dec. 3, 2024 by Joel A. Klein, Ph.D.

The Spitzka papers provide an invaluable resource for examining the intersection of medicine and criminal justice.

Posted on Tue., Nov. 26, 2024 by Alanna Davey

Our cookbooks and recipes link us to others and shape the food traditions that define our lives.

Posted on Wed., Oct. 9, 2024

Charles Elachi, the former director of NASA and Caltech’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, talked with Huntington President Karen Lawrence about the importance of daring to take risks, environmental stewardship, and the mutually enriching interactions among the arts, humanities, and sciences.

Posted on Fri., Aug. 30, 2024

Notable speakers from around the world cover diverse topics including succulents of South Africa, Madagascar, and Taiwan, the history of Agaves in the Southwestern United States, an enduring scholarly legacy, and a new campaign against the illegal plant trade.

Posted on Tue., Oct. 8, 2024

Contemporary voices in the exhibition "Storm Cloud: Picturing the Origins of Our Climate Crisis" bring forward questions of environmental history to the present. This conversation covers topics such as land extraction, human influence on plants, environmental injustice, immigration, photographic technologies, and reparative histories.

Posted on Tue., Nov. 12, 2024 by Sandy Masuo

Wild birds enliven The Huntington’s landscape throughout the year thanks to the ample habitat that the gardens provide. Among the most cherished avian guests are hummingbirds. These tiny, vibrant visitors avail themselves of The Huntington’s abundant nest sites and nesting materials, water features, and food sources.

Posted on Tue., Nov. 5, 2024 by Kevin Durkin

Charles Elachi, the former director of NASA and Caltech’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, talked with Huntington President Karen Lawrence about the importance of daring to take risks, environmental stewardship, and the mutually enriching interactions among the arts, humanities, and sciences.

Posted on Thu., Oct. 17, 2024

The acquisitions include a 12th-century Chinese silk fan, an 18th-century French portrait, a bronze sculpture from the Harlem Renaissance, and a work in resin by a member of California’s Light and Space movement.

Posted on Tue., Oct. 29, 2024 by Josh Garrett-Davis

The Los Angeles City/County Native American Indian Commission, established almost 50 years ago, serves the needs of the largest urban Native American population in the United States. The Huntington’s records related to the commission’s founding reflect some of the complex histories of Indigenous people in Southern California.