Verso
The blog of The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens.
Art
Holiday Traffic
Tue., Nov. 24, 2015 | James GlissonAs you sit around the table this Thanksgiving, conversing with relatives or suffering through a carb coma, you may think about the mayhem of bargains, lines, and bad behavior that is to come on Black Friday.
Audio
Hear Ye, Hear Ye
Thu., Nov. 19, 2015 | Diana W. ThompsonDid you hear that The Huntington possesses an illuminated prayer book that fell from the hands of Mary Queen of Scots when she was beheaded in 1587? Or that the findings of German naturalist Alexander von Humboldt laid the groundwork for John Muir’s ideas of preservation
Lectures
Remembering Loren Miller
Mon., Nov. 16, 2015 | Alice TsayLoren Miller (1903-1967) was a Los Angeles-based attorney and civil rights activist who drafted most of the briefs in the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case Brown vs. Board of Education (1954), which ended legal segregation in public schools.
Library
Unforgettable World War I Posters
Thu., Nov. 12, 2015 | David H. MihalyFor people today, the mention of World War I posters may conjure up charged images promoting patriotic messages: think Uncle Sam pointing forcefully in I Want You for the U.S. Army or a coquette in sailor's uniform
Botanical
LOOK>> An Ant Plant
Mon., Nov. 9, 2015 | Dylan Hannon, Kate LainWith LOOK>>, we venture into our wide-ranging collections and bring out a single object to explore in a short video. For this installment, we look at a Hydnophytum specimen, one of the ant plants in our tropical collections.
Conferences
Isherwood in California
Thu., Nov. 5, 2015 | James J. Berg, Chris FreemanThe conference "'My Self in a Transitional State': Isherwood in California" takes place at The Huntington on November 13 and 14 in Rothenberg Hall. We asked the conference conveners—James J. Berg
Events
Naughty Los Angeles in the 1890s
Mon., Nov. 2, 2015 | William DeverellThe Ladies' New Medical Guide an instructor, counsellor and friend in all the delicate and wonderful matters peculiar to women: fully explaining the nature and mystery of the reproductive organs in both sexes
Conferences
Reading the Aftermath of Civil War
Wed., Oct. 28, 2015 | Shirley SamuelsI had the pleasure of attending "Ending a Mighty Conflict: The Civil War in 1864–1865 and Beyond," a conference that took place at The Huntington last month. The lively talks by distinguished scholars reminded me of my recent encounters with the handwritten accounts of Civil War soldiers. Expressing noble sentiments, these soldiers called the war the "mightiest struggle ever recorded in the history of the world"