Posted on Fri., Sept. 11, 2015 by Lisa Blackburn

The irony doesn't escape Ted Matson. Raised on the prairie of North Dakota, without a tree in sight, the one-time farm boy followed a path in life that led to a full-time career in bonsai. That path also led him to The Huntington, where Matson joined the staff in February (after several years as a consultant) to oversee the more than 400 miniature trees that make up the bonsai collections.

Posted on Tue., Sept. 8, 2015 by Catherine Wehrey

A piece of women's history lies deep in the underground stacks of the Huntington Library, among the papers of American astronomer Frederick Hanley Seares (1873–1964). Seares was the head of the computing division at the Pasadena office of the Mount Wilson Observatory

Posted on Fri., Sept. 4, 2015 by Mario Einaudi and Diana W. Thompson

After they married in 1913, Henry and Arabella Huntington would spend several months each year in Europe, staying at the Château de Beauregard, a lavish castle located north of Paris, near Versailles. Reaching the Continent in those days meant traveling by ocean liner

Posted on Tue., Sept. 1, 2015 by Olivia Hummer and Kate Lain

With LOOK>>, we venture into our wide-ranging collections and bring out a single object to explore in a short video. Up first is Samuel Leigh and John Heaviside Clark's Myriorama from 1824.

Posted on Fri., Aug. 28, 2015 by Vanessa Wilkie, Ph.D.

We love to hate villains. Harry Potter's Lord Voldemort horrifies us with his flagrant use of the Unforgivable Curses. Before him, Darth Vader of Star Wars fame was the true embodiment of evil as he built the Death Star and battled his children.

Posted on Tue., Aug. 25, 2015 by Linda Chiavaroli

Heroic tales of 19th-century frontiersmen pushing westward across the American continent have a tenacious hold on the popular imagination. Think, for instance, of Lewis and Clark exploring the waterways of the newly acquired Louisiana Purchase

Posted on Fri., Aug. 21, 2015 by Thea Page

The painter, social critic, and editorial cartoonist William Hogarth (1697–1764) set the standard for modern English satire. He saw caricatures imported from the Continent and argued for the creation of a distinctly British approach

Posted on Tue., Aug. 18, 2015 by Diana W. Thompson

Huntington Explorers summer camp recently finished its 14th year at The Huntington. Each day for three weeks, children aged 5-12 explored The Huntington's library, art, and botanical collections in classes about everything from the art of storytelling to the world of science. We share the experience of one instructor

Posted on Fri., Aug. 14, 2015 by Sue Hodson

Sunday, August 16, marks the 95th anniversary of the birth of Charles Bukowski (1920–1994), whose poems, short stories, and novels depicted ordinary men and women struggling to survive in an unforgiving world.

Posted on Tue., Aug. 11, 2015 by Olivia Hummer

Next time you're in the Mapel Orientation Gallery, take 10 minutes to watch a delightful new film about the history of The Huntington. Designed and directed by Los Angeles–based filmmaker and animator Cosmo Segurson, it tells the story of Henry and Arabella Huntington