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

Videos and Recorded Programs

God’s Suicide by Harmony Holiday

Thu., June 24, 2021

Join actor Larry Powell as he portrays writer and public intellectual James Baldwin in this production of “Made in L.A. 2020” artist Harmony Holiday’s one-man play, God’s Suicide, which looks at Black male vulnerability as its central subject. Adapted from an essay by the artist and constructed around the rarely acknowledged five suicide attempts of Baldwin, this deeply personal work examines the interplay between creative and destructive forces in societies infected with white supremacy.

The program is presented by the Hammer Museum.

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Verso

Extraordinary Expenses

Wed., June 23, 2021 | Olga Tsapina, Ph.D.
In March 1852, Charles Devens, the United States Marshal for Massachusetts, submitted an expense report
News

News Release - Huntington Adds Three New Members to Board of Trustees

Wed., June 23, 2021
The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens announces the addition of three new members to its Board of Trustees. They are Christine Bender, J. Mario Molina, and Mei-Lee Ney.
Verso

Queer Artist, Queer Courage

Wed., June 16, 2021 | Manuela Gomez Rhine
Harriet Goodhue Hosmer (1830-1908) unapologetically pursued her ambitions as a sculptor in a field considered inappropriate for women and lived openly as a lesbian
Videos and Recorded Programs

Hedi El Kholti & Abdellah Taïa: Toward the sea, Where we meet

Tue., June 15, 2021

Join “Made in L.A. 2020” artist Hedi El Kholti and writer, filmmaker Abdellah Taïa as they read excerpts from their respective works and discuss their shared experiences growing up queer in Morocco and their journeys translating those experiences into writing, art, and film.

The program is presented by the Hammer Museum.

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Videos and Recorded Programs

Crafting a Literati Utopia in 19th-Century Japan: The Plum Blossom Valley at Tsukigase

Thu., June 10, 2021

Dr. Yurika Wakamatsu, assistant professor of East Asian art history at Occidental College, explores Tsukigase, a plum-filled mountain valley in today’s Nara Prefecture that came to be celebrated as a paradisiacal site in nineteenth-century Japan. Tracing Tsukigase’s transformations during this period, Dr. Wakamatsu examines how poets and painters who worked in the Sino-Japanese mode of literati art constructed a fleeting, utopian realm of reclusion by imbuing this remote landscape with imagery drawn from beloved works of Chinese literature.

Image credit: Okuhara Seiko, Plum Blossoms in Tsukigase Valley (detail), 1896, handscroll, ink and colors on silk, 28.4 x 508.2 cm. Koga City Museum of History

Verso

A Walk on the Wilde Side

Wed., June 9, 2021 | Natalie Russell
Born in Dublin and named for Irish folk heroes, Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde (1854–1900) became a cultural hero in his own right
News

News Release - Huntington Announces Retirement of Loren Rothschild, Expansion of Board of Trustees

Wed., June 9, 2021
The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens today announced a pair of developments regarding its Board of Trustees: Loren Rothschild, serving as a member since 2009 and as chair since 2017, will retire to become Trustee Emeritus