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News

The Huntington Presents “Stories from the Library: ‘Damaged Goods’ and ‘The Mirror of the Moon’”

New installations reveal how imperfect objects and lunar fascination shape humanity

Tue., June 23, 2026
New exhibitions in the “Stories from the Library” series explore how imperfect objects preserve human stories and how the moon has shaped science, art, literature, and imagination.
Verso

Defiance in Life, Resistance in Record: A Tale from the Mexican Inquisition

Wed., June 10, 2026 | Rachel Kaufman
As a formerly enslaved woman and secretly practicing Jew, Esperanza Rodríguez demonstrated a tenacity in life matched by her refusal to be forgotten in the archives. 
News

This Land Is Alive

Terry Tempest Williams and President Karen R. Lawrence on Attention, Revision, and the Open Space of Democracy

Tue., June 9, 2026 | Annabel Adams
Terry Tempest Williams and President Karen R. Lawrence on Attention, Revision, and the Open Space of Democracy.
News

Where Land Takes Root: Rethinking the American Garden

At The Huntington’s American Garden Symposium, scholars and garden leaders explored how landscapes shape—and reflect—the American story

Tue., May 26, 2026 | Annabel Adams
The Huntington’s American Garden Symposium examined gardens as archives of history, labor, conservation, and cultural meaning.
News

Library Acquisitions Reveal How History Is Recorded—and What It Leaves Out

Tue., May 19, 2026
Six manuscript, book, and photo acquisitions span histories from Edo-period Japan and Arctic exploration to early America, English criminal justice, colonial Mexico, and experimental photography in Los Angeles.
News

Robert Indiana’s 'LOVE' Joins The Huntington

Iconic sculpture to be unveiled on campus in 2026

Fri., May 8, 2026
The Huntington has acquired Robert Indiana’s 'LOVE,' the celebrated Pop Art sculpture, as a gift for its permanent collection. It will be unveiled before year’s end.
Verso

Handmade History

Fri., April 24, 2026 | Li Wei Yang, Melissa Haley
Asian American family archives not only tell personal stories—they narrate American history.
Verso

Undoing History

Mon., March 30, 2026 | Brett Rushforth
The federal government dismantled an exhibit about the Black freedom struggle in Philadelphia. The city fought back with an unlikely weapon: specialized academic research.