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News

News Release - The Huntington and Ghetto Film School Present 15 New Student Works in Inaugural Installation

Wed., Nov. 10, 2021
In an ongoing partnership with Ghetto Film School, The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens is serving as a training ground for student filmmakers exploring careers in the film industry.
News

News Release - Major American Art Reinstallation, “Borderlands,” Set to Open Nov. 20

Wed., Nov. 10, 2021
Exhibition explores a more expansive and contextualized view of American art history; features new works and new acquisitions by Enrique Martínez Celaya, Thomas Cole, Mercedes Dorame, Sandy Rodriguez, and Cara Romero, among others.
News

News Release - At The Huntington, 2021 Served as a Banner Year for American Art Acquisitions

Thu., Nov. 4, 2021
The 50-plus works span more than 100 years and are by a diverse group of artists from North America, including Mary Lee Bendolph, Lola Álvarez Bravo and Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Thomas Cole, Mercedes Dorame, Lockwood de Forest, Herter Brothers, Charles Bird King, Enrique Martínez Celaya, Cara Romero, and Kehinde Wiley.
Videos and Recorded Programs

Kehinde Wiley: “A Portrait of a Young Gentleman” Artist Remarks

Tue., Nov. 2, 2021
The Huntington celebrated American artist Kehinde Wiley with a reception in honor of his painting A Portrait of a Young Gentleman, commissioned by The Huntington as a contemporary response to Thomas
Videos and Recorded Programs

Reading the Lotus: A Garden of Words

Mon., Nov. 1, 2021
Wang Shixiang 王世襄 was 93 years old when he created the inscription “Love for the Lotus Pavilion” for The Huntington. The original handscroll is currently on view as part of the exhibition “A Garden of Words: The Calligraphy of Liu Fang Yuan.” 
News

News Release - The Huntington Acquires the Greene & Greene Archives in a Gift from the Gamble House Conservancy

Thu., Oct. 28, 2021
The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens has acquired the archives of legendary Arts and Crafts architects Greene & Greene. The trove of approximately 6,000 items includes design drawings and photographs, business correspondence, family papers, notebooks, scrapbooks, artifacts, and reference books
Videos and Recorded Programs

Frankenstein on Screen: Mary Shelley’s Adapted Progeny

Thu., Oct. 28, 2021

Mary Shelley likened the writing of her famous book to Victor Frankenstein’s making of his creature. In this lecture, James Chandler, professor at the University of Chicago and The Huntington’s R. Stanton Avery Distinguished Fellow, explores Shelley’s “creature,” in what is now one of the most widely-read novels in the English-speaking world. Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus inspired many offspring in the form of myriad adaptations since its initial publication, including more than a century of screen adaptations. What can we learn about these various adaptations by looking at their different ways of handling Shelley’s novel? What can we learn about Shelley’s novel from this remarkably rich adaptation history?

 

Videos and Recorded Programs

Thoreau’s Walden: Four Contemporary Writers on its Enduring Relevance

Wed., Oct. 27, 2021

Authors Kristen Case, Gerald Early, Pico Iyer, and Megan Marshall in conversation with Karla Nielsen, Curator of Literary Collections at The Huntington

Spring 2020 and the onset of a global pandemic saw many writers returning to Henry David Thoreau’s Walden for guidance for living in a constricted space and with a reduced footprint. Beginning on July 4, 1845, Thoreau moved into a cabin on Walden Pond for two years, two months, and two days. He chronicled the experience, first in his diary and later in a long essay: Walden, or Life in the Woods which was published in 1854.

Now Comes Good Sailing, a volume of essays edited by Andrew Blauner, coming out from Princeton University Press in October 2021, explores the ongoing resonance of Thoreau’s groundbreaking work of observation and reflection. The volume takes its title from the last four words that Thoreau wrote in his diary.

Four of the contributors to the volume join us in conversation for this Shapiro Center event moderated by Karla Nielsen, Curator of Literary Collections at The Huntington. Dr. Nielsen will also show images of The Huntington’s seven drafts of Walden.