Videos and Recorded Programs
Videos about The Huntington and previously recorded lectures, programs, and conferences.
The Power of Objects
Wed., March 27, 2019Jennifer Van Horn, assistant professor at the University of Delaware, discusses the goods Anglo-Americans purchased and used in the 18th century, from dressing tables to portraits to peg legs in this Wark Lecture.
Sino-Buddhist Medicine: A Missing Link in the Global History of Medicine
Tue., March 26, 2019The Difficulty of Being Blue
Mon., March 25, 2019Internationally renowned botanist David Lee, emeritus professor at Florida International University, discusses blue pigments in plants and why they are so rare. Lee is the author of Nature’s Fabric: Leaves in Science and Culture.
Of Lizards, Laboratories, and History: The Making and Knowing Project
Wed., March 20, 2019Pamela H. Smith, Seth Low Professor of History and Director of the Center for Science and Society at Columbia University, tells of her adventures with the Making and Knowing Project in hands-on history and in the experimental history of art and science in this Dibner Lecture.
Painted Schrank
Tue., March 19, 2019What’s a schrank and why do we have one? Elee Wood, Fielding Curator/Educator of Early American Art explains.
Glimpses of the Cosmic Dawn
Mon., March 18, 2019Alexander Ji, Hubble Fellow at the Carnegie Observatories, leads a short tour of the early history of our Universe, offering intriguing glimpses of an epoch known as Cosmic Dawn, when the first stars and galaxies were born.
Golden: How California Made America
Wed., March 13, 2019Acclaimed historian Louis Warren, professor of U.S. Western History at the University of California, Davis, explores how Californians remade American ideas of property and power between 1848 and the present in this Avery Lecture.
Busted: Brash New Stories from Texas and New Mexico
Thu., March 7, 2019Join authors Bryan Mealer and Joshua Wheeler in a discussion about hardscrabble times, places, and people in Texas and New Mexico.







