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News, stories, features, videos and podcasts by The Huntington.

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Mercedes Dorame: Everywhere Is West

Tue., Oct. 8, 2024 | Dennis Carr
In the spring of 2022, Tongva photographer Mercedes Dorame peered down at a tide pool on Santa Cruz Island, roughly 25 miles off the coast of California. Focusing her camera, she captured an image that provides a window into worlds.
Verso

Las orquídeas de México y Guatemala

Tue., Oct. 1, 2024 | Natalie Lawler
Un libro del siglo XIX sobre las orquídeas de Latinoamérica evoca una reflexión personal sobre la vulnerabilidad y la resiliencia de las plantas, el arte de la ilustración botánica y la poderosa función de los retratos como huellas perdurables de la memoria cultural.
Verso

The Orchids of Mexico and Guatemala

Tue., Oct. 1, 2024 | Natalie Lawler
A 19th-century book on Latin American orchids prompts a personal reflection on the vulnerability and resiliency of plants, the art of botanical illustration, and the power of portraits as markers of cultural memory.
Videos and Recorded Programs

Rebeca Méndez on “Storm Cloud,” John Ruskin, and a Perfect Sky

Fri., Sept. 27, 2024 | Aric Allen

Artist, designer, and UCLA professor Rebeca Méndez discusses her work Any-Instant-Whatever (2020), which is featured in “Storm Cloud: Picturing the Origins of Our Climate Crisis,” one of The Huntington’s exhibitions for PST ART: Art & Science Collide.

News

The Huntington to Present Major Retrospective on Prolific Los Angeles Artist Don Bachardy

Tue., Sept. 24, 2024
“Don Bachardy: A Life in Portraits” will feature more than 100 works of art and archival materials spanning over 70 years.
Verso

The Obsession with Extra-Illustrating Books

Tue., Sept. 24, 2024 | Julie Park, Adam Smyth
In the 18th and 19th centuries, an obsession spread among bibliophiles for extra-illustrating or grangerizing books. Readers would supplement the pages of an already published book by inserting prints and related materials acquired from other sources. This process would often result in a huge expansion of the original volume.
Verso

What Lies Hidden Beneath Velasco’s “View of Tacubaya”

Tue., Sept. 17, 2024 | Dennis Carr
When Velasco’s painting arrived at The Huntington, a few lines of printed text could be seen at the bottom of the work. Infrared reflectography, a process that can detect layers of detail not visible to the naked eye, has revealed what lies beneath the painting’s surface.
Verso

The Art and Science of Close Observation

Tue., Sept. 10, 2024 | Andrew Kersey
The exhibitions “Storm Cloud: Picturing the Origins of Our Climate Crisis” and “Growing and Knowing in the Gardens of China” trace the dovetailing histories of the relationship between humans and the environment and emphasize the significant role that close observation has played in art, science, and ethics.