Videos and Recorded Programs

Videos about The Huntington and previously recorded lectures, programs, and conferences

Most Recent

Conference

A History of the Medical Book

Fri., Nov. 16, 2018
This conference brings together a range of perspectives on medical texts that emphasize their lives as books, bringing together the disciplines of the history of medicine and of book history.
Lecture

Government and Family Life: The Unintended Consequences of the English Poor Relief System, 1660–1780

Wed., Nov. 14, 2018
Naomi Tadmor, professor of history at the University of Lancaster and the Fletcher Jones Foundation Distinguished Fellow at The Huntington, discusses the sophisticated system of social welfare developed in 17th- and 18th-century England aimed to assist the poor and its impact on local government
Lecture

New Explorations in Tea History: Putting Women and Children First

Tue., Nov. 13, 2018
Rebecca Corbett, Japanese studies librarian at USC, explores aspects of tea culture in Japan's Edo period (1603–1868) and its use in children's education. Corbett's current project focuses on the Buddhist nun and artist Tagami Kikusha (1753–1826) and the transmission of her work in modern Japan.
Lecture

A Rare Book Rogue in Texas

Thu., Nov. 8, 2018
Michael Vinson, author and proprietor of Michael Vinson Americana, shares the tale of John Holmes Jenkins III (1940–1989), a Texas antiquarian bookseller, publisher, historian, and gambler who, in 1971, helped the FBI recover a valuable set of original colored engravings of Audubon's The Birds of
Video

Rituals of Labor and Engagement: Carolina Caycedo and Mario Ybarra Jr.

Wed., Nov. 7, 2018
L.A. artists Carolina Caycedo and Mario Ybarra Jr.
Lecture

America's Costliest Natural Disaster: Rust

Tue., Nov. 6, 2018
Jonathan Waldman, author of "Rust: The Longest War," provides an illuminating look at the unsung heroes—engineers—who are working to keep our modern world from wasting away due to rust, which has been called "the great destroyer." Rust consumes cars, fells bridges, sinks ships, sparks house fires
Video

Song of Eight Drinking Immortals – Calligraphy Demonstration by Tang Qingnian

Sun., Nov. 4, 2018
Contemporary artist Tang Qingnian 唐慶年 demonstrates his calligraphy, which enlivens past traditions with a modern aesthetic sensibility. Originally from Beijing, Tang was at the forefront of China's "New Wave" art movement in the 1980s before relocating to the United States.
Lecture

Calligraphy Demonstration by Tang Qingnian

Sun., Nov. 4, 2018
Contemporary artist Tang Qingnian 唐慶年 demonstrates his calligraphy, which enlivens past traditions with a modern aesthetic sensibility. The art of ink and brush calligraphy has long been prized in China as a form of creative expression and an embodiment of scholarly culture.
Lecture

My Father, Boris Karloff: The Man Behind the Makeup

Tue., Oct. 30, 2018
Sara Karloff, daughter of the screen legend whose iconic performance as the Frankenstein Monster set the standard, shares his more human side.
Lecture

Atoms, Lies, and Hands with Eyes: Daniel Sennert’s Chymical Reform of 17th-Century Medicine

Sun., Oct. 28, 2018
Joel A. Klein, the Molina Curator for the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences at The Huntington, explores the work of Daniel Sennert (1572–1637), professor of medicine at Wittenberg University, who sought to reform 17th-century medicine through alchemy, atomism, and experimentation.
Lecture

Reader, Can You Assist Me?: John James Audubon and the Origins of Citizen Science

Wed., Oct. 24, 2018
Gregory Nobles, professor emeritus of history at Georgia Institute of Technology, explores the role of ordinary observers in scientific developments from Audubon's era in the 19th century to the present day. This program is a Ritchie Distinguished Fellow Lecture.
Lecture

Ohara School of Ikebana

Sun., Oct. 21, 2018
Hiroki Ohara, fifth-generation headmaster of the Ohara School of Ikebana, presents a lecture-demonstration of the Japanese art of ikebana flower arranging in celebration of the school's 50th anniversary in Los Angeles.