Skip to content

OPEN TODAY: 10 A.M.–5 P.M.

Tickets

Videos and Recorded Programs


Videos about The Huntington and previously recorded lectures, programs, and conferences.

Video

Carnegie Lecture Series: Simulating the Universe, One Galaxy at a Time

Mon., April 17, 2017

Andrew Wetzel discusses how theoretical astrophysics is now revealing how galaxies are formed, using the world’s most powerful supercomputers to simulate this complex process.

Lecture

Potosí, Silver, and the Coming of the Modern World

Wed., April 12, 2017

John Demos, Samuel Knight Professor Emeritus of History at Yale University and the Ritchie Distinguished Fellow at The Huntington, presents an account of Potosí, the great South American silver mine and boomtown that galvanized imperial Spain in the 16th and 17th centuries, fueled the rise of capitalism, destroyed native peoples and cultures en masse, and changed history—for good or ill?

Video

DO NOT OPEN! Investigating an Artifact from The Huntington’s Vault

Tue., April 11, 2017

The Huntington has the only known recording of Joseph H. Hazelton’s eyewitness account of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Aric Allen documents the story of this strange artifact.

Video

Carnegie Lecture Series: Unraveling the Mysteries of Exploding Stars

Mon., April 3, 2017

Tony Piro discusses how scientists are combining observations with theoretical modeling to unravel the mysteries of supernovae.

Lecture

A Recipe is More than a Recipe

Wed., March 29, 2017

Drawing on The Huntington’s Anne M. Cranston American Regional and Charitable Cookbook Collection, food writer Patric Kuh discusses what these shared recipes can tell us, not just about food and community but about the changes that shaped the way Americans cook.

Lecture

Framing a New Elegance: The World of George T. Marsh and His Japanese House

Tue., March 28, 2017

Originally conceived by art dealer George T. Marsh as an exotic setting in which to sell curiosities, the building that in 1912 became The Huntington’s Japanese House is a beautiful remnant of a transformational moment in design history. Art historian Hannah Sigur puts Marsh and his house in context, discussing the factors that helped make Japanese aesthetics the basis of good taste at the turn...

Lecture

Huang Ruo and Qian Yi

Fri., March 24, 2017

Composer Huang Ruo, the 2017 Cheng Family Visiting Artist at The Huntington, is joined by the acclaimed kun opera singer Qian Yi for an evening of discussion and performance. Together they explore the Chinese kun opera tradition and how Huang uses the form in his contemporary compositions.

Lecture

Excavating the Book

Mon., March 20, 2017

Stephen Orgel, J. E. Reynolds Professor in Humanities at Stanford University, discusses books and their marketing throughout history, emphasizing the ways in which books are embedded in history, and how literary interpretation is at least partly a form of archaeology. This talk is part of the Zamorano Lecture series at The Huntington.