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Verso


The blog of The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens.

Conservation

Preserving the Signs of Censorship

Mon., April 24, 2017 | Kristi Westberg
Five hundred years before government officials in some countries got in the business of censoring Instagram feeds or Twitter accounts, the Roman Catholic Church was using ink to black out text that it considered dangerous.
Botanical

Big Bonsai? Not Really

Fri., April 21, 2017 | Diana W. Thompson
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
Audio

Recent Lectures: Feb. 23–April 12, 2017

Wed., April 19, 2017 | Huntington Staff
Home to gorgeous gardens, spectacular art, and stunning rare books and manuscripts, The Huntington also offers an impressive slate of lectures and conferences on topics and themes related to its collections. Featured are audio recordings of five recent lectures and conversations.
Beyond The H

Transcription Challenge for Civil War Telegrams

Mon., April 17, 2017 | Kevin Durkin
In June 2016, The Huntington launched a crowdsourcing project called "Decoding the Civil War" to transcribe and decipher a collection of 15,922 U.S. Civil War telegrams between Abraham Lincoln, his Cabinet, and officers of the Union Army.
Video

Do Not Open

Thu., April 13, 2017 | Susan Turner-Lowe, Aric Allen
The Huntington Library is a vast treasure box, replete with more than nine million items, including rare books, manuscripts, photographs, and maps. In addition, the Library houses a variety of oddities—such as a set of false teeth, an Oscar statuette, and a collection of vintage light bulbs.
Library

The Power of Touch

Mon., April 10, 2017 | Jennifer A. Watts
One afternoon in the Library's archive, I found a battered and scuffed photograph at the bottom of a small pile. Twenty-four men gaze somberly at the camera; all wear jackets and ties. The mere fact that the 19th-century portrait showed Black and white men respectfully intermingled
Exhibitions

Telling Her Stories

Thu., April 6, 2017 | Kevin Durkin
The Huntington is launching the first major exhibition on the life and work of award-winning science-fiction writer Octavia E. Butler (1947–2006), whose literary archive resides here. She was the first science fiction writer to receive a prestigious MacArthur "genius" award and the first African American woman to win widespread recognition writing in that genre.
Conferences

West of Walden

Mon., April 3, 2017 | Laura Dassow
"Walden. Yesterday I came here to live." That entry from the journal of Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862), and the intellectual journey it began, would by themselves be enough to place him in the American pantheon of writers and thinkers.