A 322-year-old house from Marugame, Japan is being added to the Japanese Garden. This well-preserved structure is an exquisite example of a working magistrate's residence that once served as the center of village life and home to generations of the same family.
Edward Kamens, professor of Japanese Studies at Yale University, considers the aesthetics of viewing and reading early modern Japanese calligraphy albums—tekagami—in which fragmentary samples of writing by notable writers are brought together for appreciation and display. Focus will be placed on the content of a tekagami in the collection of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University.
The Huntington's reconstruction of a 17th-century Japanese magistrate's house, shipped to the U.S. in pieces in 2020 from Marugame, Japan, has made remarkable progress since a formal Shinto roof-raising ceremony marked the historic building's early stage of reassembly in May 2021.
Ruth Watanabe: A Lesson in Tone, Courage, and Compassion
In this lesson, students will engage in the close reading of a letter written by a young woman who was incarcerated during World War II. Students will evaluate the tone and cultural values of the letter. Students will consider how tone and cultural values affect their own writing.
Time: 1 hour
Grades: 6th-8th; 9th-12th
The Zoot Suit Riots
In this lesson, students will learn about the history of the Zoot Suit Riots. By analyzing primary sources, such as newspaper articles, surrounding the events of June 1943, students will identify the role of media, racism, discrimination, and bias in igniting public violence.
Time: 2-4 hours
Grades: 9th-12th
Hawaiian Creation Stories: Occupation and Resistance
In this lesson, students will explore Hawaiian creation stories through multiple sources and interrogate the perspectives that influence a Western interpretation of the stories.
Time: 2 hours
Grades: 6th-8th
Sandy Rodriguez’s YOU ARE HERE / Tovaangar / El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles de Porciúncula / Los Angeles is a multilingual map of the greater Los Angeles area, representing the topography, language, flora, fauna, and land stewardship in the region over time and illustrating the movement and histories of peoples who have called—and continue to call—the area home.
This work is part of “Borderlands,” a new permanent collections installation that explores a more expansive view of American art history.
What is it about Blue Boy that appeals to advertisers, entertainers, and interior decorators? His youth? His fancy clothes? Nostalgia? Notoriety? Over the years, he has served as a stand-in for boyhood, Britain, and fine art itself. American Anglophiles consumed Blue Boy tchotchkes the way they might consume Downton Abbey merch today.
- Rarely seen highlights from The Huntington’s premier collection of British drawings and watercolors spotlight top artists working in the medium from the 17th to the mid-20th century
- Richly illustrated catalog complements the exhibition
- On view June 18–Sept. 5, 2022 | MaryLou and George Boone Gallery