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The Huntington’s blog takes you behind the scenes for a scholarly view of the collections.

Orchid Collection

Worth the Wait

Fri., Nov. 15, 2013 | Lance A. Birk
I waited 49 years to see this. When I was 26, one of my best friends from high school introduced me to orchids. While visiting Gary at his parents’ home one day in 1964, I saw some unusual flowers blooming in the oak trees
Exhibitions

EXHIBITIONS | A Unifying Principle

Mon., Nov. 11, 2013 | Matt Stevens
Early in the Civil War, abolitionist Frederick Douglass urged Abraham Lincoln to allow black men to serve in the Union Army. "Men in earnest don't fight with one hand, when they might fight with two," he wrote in a controversial article in September 1861.
Exhibitions

EXHIBITIONS | All the World’s a Page

Fri., Nov. 8, 2013 | Matt Stevens
As you enter the Library's Main Hall and walk straight ahead, one of the first things you'll see is a familiar treasure underneath a Plexiglas sign reading "A Landmark in Printing." The Gutenberg Bible (ca. 1455) anchors one of 12 sections in "Remarkable Works, Remarkable Times: Highlights from the Huntington Library,"
Exhibitions

“I have been & gone & done it!!”

Tue., Nov. 5, 2013 | Thea Page
Exactly 141 years ago today, a determined band of women in Rochester, N.Y., broke the law by voting in the presidential election of 1872. One of them was noted suffrage advocate Susan B. Anthony (1820–1906).
Exhibitions

EXHIBITIONS | Coaching Citizenship

Fri., Nov. 1, 2013 | Jennifer Goldman
Next Saturday, Nov. 9, "Remarkable Works, Remarkable Times: Highlights from the Huntington Library" will open in the Main Hall of the Library, a new installation of The Huntington's Library treasures. Anchoring 12 sections will be key works
News Bytes

Tapping a New Mine of Research

Tue., Oct. 29, 2013 | Matt Stevens
Sutter's Mill. Forty-niners panning for gold. Lottery of the Golden Ingot? If you thought you knew everything about the California Gold Rush, think again.
Art

How Do You Frame a Masterpiece?

Thu., Oct. 24, 2013 | Catherine Hess
In 1921, Henry and Arabella Huntington purchased what would become the most famous work of art in their collection: The Blue Boy (1770) by Thomas Gainsborough. Its celebrity rests on many factors, not least of which is the superb quality of the painting
Art

VIDERE | Frame [video]

Fri., Oct. 18, 2013 | Kate Lain
Videre, Latin for to see, is a video series that plays with the idea of re-seeing. The short works featured here are explorations of sights, sounds, and sensing at The Huntington.