Posted on Fri., Aug. 7, 2015 by Diana W. Thompson

If you're thinking of stopping by the Japanese Garden's Seifu-an teahouse for the second-Monday-of-the-month tour on Aug. 10, then be sure to visit the waiting bench, or Koshikake-machiai, in the tea garden.

Posted on Tue., Aug. 4, 2015 by Vanessa Wilkie, Ph.D.

The Huntington's Ellesmere Chaucer, an illuminated manuscript produced around the year 1400, is the most handsome extant version of The Canterbury Tales in the world. Many scholars believe Geoffrey Chaucer oversaw some of its production.

Posted on Fri., July 31, 2015 by Katherine Christiansen and Melinda McCurdy

What do avant-garde art and Britain's Royal Navy have in common? The answer is Edward Wadsworth (1889–1949), a British artist whose work is currently part of The Huntington's "Between Modernism and Tradition: British Works on Paper, 1914–1948" exhibition

Posted on Tue., July 28, 2015 by Sara Schacht

So wrote Shakespeare four centuries ago, and many people today would agree that while the beauty of a rose is exceptional, what truly inspires us is its scent. The Huntington's historic Rose Garden is home to 1,400 rose cultivars

Posted on Fri., July 24, 2015 by Christine Quach

Before entering the Mapel Orientation Gallery, take a moment to notice the elegant outlines floating on the front windows. These silhouettes, which greet you as you enter and bid you a pleasant day as you leave, are a snapshot of The Huntington's library, art, and botanical collections.

Posted on Tue., July 21, 2015 by Vanessa Wilkie, Ph.D.

A popular rule of etiquette recommends avoiding two topics in polite conversation: politics and religion. I would add a third—grammar. No discussion becomes more heated than a debate over whether it is acceptable to end a sentence with a preposition.

Posted on Wed., July 15, 2015 by Sara Schacht

Recent visitors to The Huntington's Chinese Garden—or Garden of Flowing Fragrance (Liu Fang Yuan)—may have noticed lotus flowers in bloom. The warm summer sun prompted their young leaves to emerge and float on the surface of the Lake of Reflected Fragrance.

Posted on Fri., July 10, 2015 by Olivia Hummer

Next Tuesday is Bastille Day, when France celebrates the start of the French Revolution, which began with the storming of the Bastille on July 14, 1789. To mark the occasion, we highlight items in The Huntington's European art collection that have been forever altered

Posted on Tue., July 7, 2015 by Sara Schacht

It's nearly impossible to experience all that The Huntington has to offer in a single day. There are acres of gardens to explore, hundreds of world-class works of art to gaze upon, and an entire library filled with rare books and manuscripts that bring history and literature to life.

Posted on Fri., July 3, 2015 by Thea Page

The year was 1976, and the country was 200 years young. The gritty film Rocky filled movie theaters and a new TV show, "The Bionic Woman," flashed across TV screens. It was a time happily poised between the end of the Vietnam War and the beginning of long gas station lines.