Huntington Verso

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

Art

The Flowering of Color Printing

Mon., March 21, 2016 | David H. Mihaly
In "The Artist's Garden: American Impressionism and the Garden Movement, 1887–1920"—the exhibition on view in The Huntington's MaryLou and George Boone Gallery through May 9—you can catch a glimpse of a 19th-century innovation
Library

Oil Exploration, Family, and Photography

Thu., March 17, 2016 | Noeme Santana
Ralph Arnold (1875–1961) was an eminent petroleum engineer, geologist, local Pasadena resident—and an avid photographer. Photography was an essential part of his fieldwork, but he also used the medium to document his family life.
Botanical

Pruning, Kyoto-style

Mon., March 14, 2016 | Diana W. Thompson
Kyoto-based landscape architect Takuhiro Yamada stood in The Huntington's Japanese tea garden and gazed at the trees and shrubs near the Seifu-an teahouse. For inspiration, he closed his eyes and imagined that he was in Japan.
Beyond The H

Einstein’s Still Making Waves

Thu., March 10, 2016 | Diana Kormos-Buchwald and Kevin Durkin
Tomorrow The Huntington will cohost the second day of Caltech's sixth biennial Francis Bacon Conference, "General Relativity at One Hundred." The conference runs from March 10–12, with the first and third days taking place at Caltech.
Library

Volunteering to Decipher Paul Conrad

Mon., March 7, 2016 | Natalie Russell
Meet Huntington volunteer Dennis Harbach. Over the past two years, Harbach has laughed, cried, and winced his way through the gargantuan task of producing searchable metadata for the satirical cartoons in the Paul Conrad papers.
Art

Evolution of a Van Dyck

Wed., March 2, 2016 | Diana W. Thompson
A major U.S. exhibition on Flemish master portrait artist Anthony van Dyck (1599–1641) opens today at New York's Frick Collection. The Huntington has its own van Dyck story to tell. At its center is the artist's beautiful full-length painting Anne (Killigrew) Kirke
Art

For Neophiles, Aesthetes, and People Who Like to Eat

Thu., Feb. 25, 2016 | Thea Page
Surprise! There are 11 new acquisitions on view in one room in the Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art right now. That's great news for neophiles, and even greater news for fans of representational art from the mid-20th century.
Art

Looking at Loved Ones

Mon., Feb. 22, 2016 | Melinda McCurdy
The Huntington is rightfully known for its collection of British portraits. Most of these are the product of a professional association between artist and client. For example, Thomas Gainsborough's dazzling full-length portrait of Elizabeth Beaufoy (circa 1780)
Events

Ringing in the Year of the Monkey

Wed., Feb. 17, 2016 | Lisa Blackburn
Happy 4714! According to the lunar calendar, that's the brand new year that began on Feb. 8, ushering in the Year of the Monkey. In China and in many Asian cultures around the world—and in communities right here in Southern California—the lunar new year is the most important holiday
Beyond The H

A Whale of a Discovery

Thu., Feb. 11, 2016 | Linda Chiavaroli
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
Beyond The H

Alice at 150

Mon., Feb. 8, 2016 | Laura Stalker
Throughout the United States and Britain, Lewis Carroll's immortal little girl is being fêted on the occasion of her 150th birthday—with exhibits and events, plays and performances.
Art

Art and the Garden Movement

Wed., Feb. 3, 2016 | Diana W. Thompson
The relationship between garden design and painting is the subject of "The Artist's Garden: American Impressionism and the Garden Movement, 1887–1920," on view Jan. 23–May 9 in the MaryLou and George Boone Gallery.