Posted on Thu., Sept. 14, 2017 by Anne Goldgar

In the first half of the 18th century, Hans Sloane (1660–1753)—the collector, physician, and president of the Royal Society—was the acknowledged center of a web of international relationships that brought objects, letters, and visitors into his house

Posted on Mon., Sept. 11, 2017 by Catherine G. Wagley and Emily Lacy

A photograph of the actress, director, and producer Olga Nethersole (1867–1951) shows her descending from a pedestal on which she had been posing as a statue. Men crouch and kneel beneath her.

Posted on Wed., Sept. 6, 2017 by Lisa Blackburn

It's one thing to read about history in a school textbook. It's quite another thing to engage with it first-hand: to make personal connections with history and, by doing so, to gain perspectives on the past.

Posted on Thu., Aug. 31, 2017 by Natalie Russell

If you were to ask Sue Hodson, who is retiring today, about her favorite Huntington memories, she might tell you about the repartee that was exchanged by the panel of political cartoonists convened in conjunction with her Paul Conrad exhibition.

Posted on Wed., Aug. 23, 2017 by Laura Forsberg

Miniature books are among the hidden treasures at The Huntington. Henry E. Huntington did not set out to collect miniature books, but he received them as part of other large collections he purchased en bloc.

Posted on Thu., Aug. 17, 2017 by Jay M. Pasachoff

On August 21, 2017, millions of people across North America will experience a total solar eclipse as the moon passes between the sun and Earth, completely covering the face of the sun for as long as several minutes.

Posted on Wed., Aug. 9, 2017 by Catherine G. Wagley and Emily Lacy

"This was one of the first major purchases of art that Henry Huntington made at the request of his wife Arabella," says Soyoung Shin. She is standing in front of the 19-foot wide tapestry The Bird Catchers in the Huntington Art Gallery.

Posted on Wed., Aug. 2, 2017 by Huntington Staff

Home to gorgeous gardens, spectacular art, and stunning rare books and manuscripts, The Huntington also offers an impressive slate of lectures and conferences on topics and themes related to its collections. Featured are audio recordings of five recent lectures and conversations.

Posted on Wed., July 26, 2017 by Natalie Russell

Summer is a time for enjoying the great outdoors, and what better way than by hiking and camping? That's as true today as it was more than a century ago, when one remarkable woman embarked on a 10-day camping trip in the San Gabriel Mountains with a group of friends.

Posted on Wed., July 19, 2017 by Adam Bridgen

Most of us have little experience of being thrown out of a garden. When I've been found wandering through The Huntington's orange groves (usually off-limits to visitors), at worst I'm asked by one of the polite staff to ramble somewhere less wild.