Posted on Fri., Sept. 2, 2011 by Matt Stevens

Echoes of a conference held at The Huntington in April continue to reverberate this Labor Day weekend. "Guest Workers: Western Origin, Global Future," a two-day conference organized by historian Matthew Garcia, spun out of an exhibition

Posted on Thu., Aug. 25, 2011 by Scott Kleinrock

Enjoy the freshest, tastiest salad fixings and save money at the same time. Tara Kolla of Silver Lake Farms will share tips for propagating, growing, and harvesting a bounty

Posted on Wed., Aug. 24, 2011 by Lisa Blackburn

"The Long Leg" by Edward Hopper has been a favorite painting with Huntington visitors since its debut in 1984 as one of the artworks that established the American art collection. On Aug. 24 it received the additional distinction of being issued as a postage stamp

Posted on Wed., Aug. 17, 2011 by Matt Stevens

Incunables (or incunabula) are books printed before 1501, in the infancy of printing. The term, from Latin, means literally "swaddling clothes." Johann Gutenberg of Germany is credited with inventing the basics of printing in the West in 1440

Posted on Fri., Aug. 12, 2011 by Thea Page

Huntington curators call the second half of the 18th century England's "golden age of mezzotint." Invented in the 1600s, the engraving technique was little used until it exploded in popularity in the mid 1700s. It employs a metal plate covered with fine dots, or a "burr," which prints as a deep velvety black.

Posted on Wed., Aug. 10, 2011 by Steven Robles

This photograph and illustration depict the same scene—black soldiers undergoing punishment on the "wooden horse." The illustration comes from Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper (Dec. 10, 1884), and the illustrator assures

Posted on Thu., Aug. 4, 2011 by Matthew Fisk

The exhibition "Pre-Raphaelites and Their Followers: British and American Drawings from The Huntington's Collections" traces the mid-19th century artistic movement known as Pre-Raphaelitism

Posted on Tue., Aug. 2, 2011 by John Vining

Last summer, I worked as an intern in the manuscripts department, exploring the Library's large collection of history of science materials. Now and then, a nonpaper item would appear among the boxes and boxes of manuscripts.

Posted on Thu., July 28, 2011 by Lisa Blackburn

"There are in Los Angeles a couple of rare and extraordinary treasures in the history of Chinese culture," said director Peter Sellars, in a presentation at The Huntington on Tuesday evening. "One is The Huntington's Chinese garden. The other is this woman."

Posted on Tue., July 26, 2011 by James Folsom

What do you do when someone retires after dedicating 28 years to the Gardens? This was the situation last week when Clair Martin stepped down from his position as the Ruth B. and E. L. Shannon Curator of the Rose and Perennial Gardens.