Videos and Recorded Programs

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

Most Recent

Lecture

LISTEN>> Caring for a Collection

Thu., Sept. 1, 2016
In this LISTEN>> segment, visiting journalist Corinne DeWitt meets up with book conservator Kristi Westberg to learn a bit about what goes into caring for The Huntington's history of science collections.
Video

LOOK>> Spelling Slips

Mon., Aug. 1, 2016
With LOOK>>, we venture into our wide-ranging collections and bring out a single object to explore in a short video. In this installment, we look at "Criss Cross Spellings Slips," a late 19th-century parlor game.
Lecture

Explorations in the History of the Rose in China

Thu., June 9, 2016
Guoliang Wang, the author of "Old Roses of China," surveys the development of the rose in China, from the Song dynasty (960–1279) to the Qing dynasty (1644–1911) and beyond.
Lecture

LISTEN>> Japanese Tea Ceremony

Fri., June 3, 2016
Visiting journalist Corinne DeWitt heads to the Seifu-an tea house in the Japanese Garden, where Robert Hori, gardens cultural curator, performs a traditional Japanese tea ceremony and discusses the intricacies of this venerable art form.
Lecture

Let the People Rule

Wed., May 25, 2016
Geoffrey Cowan, president of the Annenberg Foundation Trust at Sunnylands, discusses his book "Let the People Rule: Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of the Presidential Primary."
Lecture

Japanese Gardens of Manzanar: Past, Present, and Future

Tue., May 24, 2016
Jeffery Burton, archaeologist at the Manzanar National Historic Site, examines traces of the gardens, which were lost and abandoned when the site was closed.
Video

The Secret Lives of Galaxies

Mon., May 16, 2016
Astronomer Katherine Alatalo tours the Hubble sequence, from "young" to "old" galaxies, exploring three avenues to galactic transitions: the quiet, slow fade; the violent merger; and the quietly violent evolution of a galaxy, likely due to a supermassive black hole in its center.
Video

Exoplanets

Mon., May 2, 2016
Astronomer Kevin Schlaufman, Carnegie-Princeton Fellow at the Carnegie Observatories, tells the story of exoplanets to date, and outlines the progress being made in the search for life elsewhere in our galaxy. This event is part of the Carnegie Astronomy Lecture Series.
Video

A Short History of Planet Formations

Mon., April 18, 2016
Anat Shahar, staff scientist in the geophysical laboratory at the Carnegie Institution for Science, explores terrestrial planets and discusses what laboratory experiments can reveal about the conditions that formed them. This event is part of the Carnegie Astronomy Lecture Series
Video

From the Big Bang to Black Holes and Gravitational Waves

Fri., March 11, 2016
Kip Thorne, Feynman Professor of Theoretical Physics at Caltech, describes the ideas underlying general relativity and the amazing discoveries about warped spacetime that have been made in the past 100 years.