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California juniper (Juniperus californica), Han-kengai  or semicascade style bonsai, estimated age of original plant material: 1,500–1,800 years old. Collected from JawboneCanyon, Mojave Desert and displayed in pot made by Sara Rayner. Collected, styled, and donated by Shig Miya. Photo by Andrew Mitchell. The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens.
Verso

Exploring The Huntington’s Collections Through Bonsai

Oct. 14, 2020

Visitors can discover an expansive new way to look at miniature trees in "Lifelines/Timelines: Exploring The Huntington's Collections Through Bonsai," on view Oct. 17, 2020 to Jan. 25, 2021.

Rosten Woo inspecting archival materials
Verso

Utopia is Nowhere

Sep. 10, 2019

Carribean Fragoza, a freelance journalist who writes about art in Southern California, Vanessa Wilkie, the William A. Moffett Curator of Medieval Manuscripts and British History at The Huntington, and artist, designer, writer, educator, and /five participant Rosten Woo sat down to discuss More's Utopia.

Visitors looking at corpse flower
Verso

A Stinky Family Tree

Aug. 22, 2014

The newest flowering of the titan arum (Amorphophallus titanum, or "Corpse Flower") at The Huntington has generated good questions about the origin of this plant at our institution. This wonder of the vegetable kingdom has now flowered for us five times

Abraham Lincoln
Verso

Many Happy Returns

Feb. 16, 2011

Abraham Lincoln never set foot in California, but the Huntington Library has become one of the premier repositories of Lincolnian—manuscripts, books, letters, and ephemera by and about our 16th president. In 1914, Henry Huntington purchased the collection of William H. Lambert, a Philadelphia lawyer who was known as one of the "Big Five" collectors of Lincoln memorabilia.

Garden educators took part in a series of agroecology workshops in the Huntington Ranch Garden
Verso

Thinking Outside the Bin

Apr. 22, 2014

Are visions of spring fertility dancing in your head but not in your garden? Could the magical process of composting bring new life to your soil and plants? Back in January and February I attended a professional development series at the Huntington Ranch and have been putting those lessons to good use.

Harriet Goodhue Hosmer's Zenobia in Chains
Verso

#5WomenArtists in the American Collections

Mar. 8, 2017

The history of art is peppered with tales of women artists who struggled to gain the same recognition as men. To shine a light on women’s artistic bounty, the National Museum of Women in the Arts kicked off a social media campaign last March to honor Women’s History Month. 

A modest pocketbook made in 1776 by Elizabeth Fellows
Verso

The Spirit of 1776 and 1924 and 1979…

Jul. 4, 2014

With the arrival of Independence Day weekend, The Huntington is counting down the days to the opening of expanded gallery space in the Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art. Come July 19, you can visit five new rooms that will allow for the display of nearly 100 more works.

Mario Ybarra Jr.
Verso

Artist Mario Ybarra Jr.

Aug. 15, 2018

The summer day simmered. As artist Mario Ybarra Jr., his assistant Jennifer Vanegas, and I strolled through the gardens under the shade of carefully trimmed foliage, steam rose from the warm, dark earth underfoot...

A collage of Verso highlights from 2017
Verso

Stories Worth Revisiting

Dec. 27, 2017

Before we bid farewell to 2017 and welcome 2018, we'd like to highlight several stories published over the past 12 months that are among our favorites. We launch our retrospective with one of our most popular stories of the year, an exploration of the tiny winged creatures known as fairies

Portrait of Dana Johnson
Verso

Dana Johnson and Delilah Beasley

Oct. 23, 2019

Carribean Fragoza, a freelance journalist who writes about art in Southern California, focuses in this post on Dana Johnson, writer and associate professor of English

Alyssa Collins. Photo by Shane Lin.
News

News Release - The Huntington Awards Octavia E. Butler Fellowship to Alyssa Collins

Apr. 19, 2021

The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens announced today that it has awarded Alyssa Collins, assistant professor of English Language and Literature and African American Studies at the University of South Carolina, a yearlong Octavia E. Butler Fellowship for the study of the renowned science fiction writer.

Linda Colley
Verso

World Wide History

Sep. 29, 2010

One of the last times Linda Colley gave a public lecture in Southern California, it changed the course of her research. The professor of history from Princeton will help kick off the new lecture season at The Huntington

Artist-botanist Zya S. Levy
Verso

Artists in the Gardens

Oct. 23, 2017

Catherine G. Wagley, a freelance journalist who writes about art and visual culture in Los Angeles, focuses in this post on the three artists delving into the botanical collections: Zya S. Levy, Sarita Dougherty, and Olivia Chumacero.

Verso

Thinking Outside the (Art) Box

May 31, 2022

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the amount of time that people spent focused on screens was an issue of concern. Sarah Wilson of the Autry Museum had an idea: bring together museum education staff to find an innovative way to serve the needs of children and families beyond online learning.

Detail of ship from Thomas More Utopia
News

News Release - Exhibition Takes a Fresh Look at 'Utopia' with New Works That Engage with The Huntington's Collections

Oct. 9, 2019

New works of art and literature will debut at The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens in "Beside the Edge of the World," one of the programs marking The Huntington's Centennial.

Fragment of American flag from Fort Sumter
Verso

Capture the Flag

Apr. 12, 2011

Confederate forces attacked Fort Sumter early in the morning of April 12, 1861. Two days later, Major Robert Anderson surrendered the fortification off the coast of South Carolina, but not before lowering the American flag and keeping it as a souvenir. A fragment of that flag is bound into a volume of a unique set of books in The Huntington Library.

Detail of Neapolitan Fisher-girls Surprised Bathing by Moonlight by J.M.W. Turner,
Verso

Buying a Turner

Feb. 20, 2015

Interest in the 19th-century British landscape painter Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851) is stronger than ever. Director Mike Leigh's biopic Mr. Turner was nominated for four Oscars

Artist Carolina Caycedo
Verso

Artists Research and Reflect

Jun. 20, 2018

Carolina Caycedo and Mario Ybarra Jr. begin their residencies at The Huntington by bringing distinct approaches to making new work inspired by the institution's library, art, and garden collections. Whether instinctive or methodical, intellectual or personal, both artists find ways to enter The Huntington and connect with larger historical narratives.

Mimosa pudica
Verso

Mimosas All Around!

Jan. 25, 2013

Mimosas all around! No, not the one you drink! The Mimosa I'm talking about is Mimosa pudica, "The Sensitive Plant" that is growing in The Rose Hills Foundation Conservatory for Botanical Science. Some may refer to this plant as "The Humble Plant" or even as "The Shame Plant"

John Frame sculpture
Verso

EXHIBITIONS | Frame by Frame

Feb. 11, 2011

Next month, a new exhibition featuring the work of California sculptor John Frame opens at The Huntington. "Three Fragments of a Lost Tale: Sculpture and Story by John Frame" will include sculptural figures

Landscape designer Takuhiro Yamada and his pruning crew
Verso

Big Bonsai? Not Really

Apr. 21, 2017

For Kyoto-based landscape designer Takuhiro Yamada, the tea garden he designed in The Huntington's Japanese Garden is a work in progress. Each year, he returns to check on its development and chooses a few areas where he can help infuse the plants

Lily Ponds
Verso

Flourishing Lily Ponds

Jul. 12, 2017

The Lily Ponds, among the first garden features developed at The Huntington, are at their seasonal peak now. William Hertrich, Henry Huntington's first superintendent of the gardens, created the five descending ponds from natural springs

Loren Rothschild
News

News Release - Huntington Announces Retirement of Loren Rothschild, Expansion of Board of Trustees

Jun. 9, 2021

The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens today announced a pair of developments regarding its Board of Trustees: Loren Rothschild, serving as a member since 2009 and as chair since 2017, will retire to become Trustee Emeritus

Colonel Ephraim Elmer Ellsworth standing alongside his sword dressed in his Union uniform.
Verso

Beyond All Earthly Power

Aug. 30, 2022

In the predawn hours of May 24, 1861, the 11th Regiment of New York Infantry disembarked from steamers in Alexandria, Virginia. The men, commanded by Col. Elmer E. Ellsworth (1837–1861), who was only 24 years old, met no resistance.

Image of whaling ships
Verso

A Whale of a Discovery

Feb. 11, 2016

It's not every day that a lithograph from The Huntington's collections is used to publicize a major archaeological discovery. But that's what happened last month, when the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration posted one of The Huntington's prints