Posted on Wed., July 17, 2019 by Usha Lee McFarling

Bees are no strangers to The Huntington. There are numerous hives in trees on the property that cause few problems

Posted on Mon., June 3, 2019

Architectural historian Barbara Lamprecht explores a little known but key aspect of Richard Neutra's unique contribution to architecture: designing environments that fused constructions and site to create "soul anchorages" or "habitats." Renowned for his sleek interpretations of Modernism, Neutra's first job after World War I was as a gardening assistant to one of Switzerland's most famous early purveyors of Modern landscape design. Neutra later integrated his knowledge of plants with ideas about evolutionary biology's role in human well-being.

Posted on Fri., May 17, 2019

This interdisciplinary conference illuminates the movement of writers, artists, scientists, and cultural goods between Paris and London during the fourteen months of peace ushered in by the Treaty of Amiens, from March 1802 through May 1803–the first break in hostilities after a decade of Revolutionary warfare.

Posted on Thu., May 23, 2019

Historian Victoria Johnson discusses the life of David Hosack, the attending physician at the Hamilton-Burr duel and founder of the nation's first public botanical garden, today the site of Rockefeller Center. Johnson is the author of the Pulitzer Prize-nominated biography of Hosack, American Eden: David Hosack, Botany, and Medicine in the Garden of the Early Republic.

Posted on Tue., May 21, 2019

The Browns of California: A Conversation with Governor Jerry Brown and Miriam Pawel, moderated by William Deverell. The program is presented by the Huntington–USC Institute on California and the West.

ICW logo

Posted on Mon., May 13, 2019

Peter Moore, writer and lecturer at the University of Oxford, takes us back to the mid-18th century to the story of how a humble coal collier from a small port in northern England came to define an entire age.

Posted on Wed., June 26, 2019 by Lily Allen

They sit on a rectangular piece of plywood that rises mere inches off the ground—more like a dancefloor than a platform.

Posted on Wed., June 12, 2019 by Usha Lee McFarling

Have you ever wondered what happens to the ripe, luscious oranges you see growing in The Huntington's orchards? They help feed people in need.

Posted on Tue., June 4, 2019

The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens announced today that it will enter a float in the Jan. 1, 2020 Rose Parade®.

Posted on Wed., June 5, 2019 by Deborah Miller Marr

This is the season when students start scribbling words like "Have a great summer!"