Loading Events
  • This event has passed.

The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens

Event Series Dates
Daily except for Tuesdays

Explore living collections of orchids and camellias, a botanical conservatory, a fragrant rose garden, a children’s garden, and more, in 16 themed gardens spread over 120 acres. All visitors, including members, must reserve tickets online in advance.

 

Open Daily,  10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m., Closed on Tuesdays

Location

The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Garden
1151 Oxford Road
San Marino, CA United States
+ Google Map
Phone:
626.405.2100
Website:
View Venue Website

Upcoming Events

March 19 @ 10:00 am - 5:00 pm
Event Series Event Series (See All)
California African American Museum, 600 State Drive, Exposition Park
Los Angeles, CA 90037 United States
Free

Tatyana Fazlalizadeh: Speaking to Falling Seeds

Tatyana Fazlalizadeh is a Brooklyn-based interdisciplinary artist whose practice considers Black image making as a site of protest, contestation, affirmation, and possibility. At CAAM, Fazlalizadeh will present a series of portraits of Black Angelenos wheat-pasted across the atrium’s monumental walls. Based on photographs and conversations that took place this spring while the artist was living in Los Angeles, the portraits ask how safety is inferred, built, and felt for the city’s Black residents.

March 19 @ 10:00 am - 5:00 pm
Event Series Event Series (See All)
California African American Museum, 600 State Drive, Exposition Park
Los Angeles, CA 90037 United States
Free

Black California Dreamin’: Claiming Space at America’s Leisure Frontier

Access to nature, recreation, and sites of relaxation—in other words, leisure—is critical to pursuing the full range of human experience, self-fulfillment, and dignity. The exhibition illuminates Angelenos and other Californians who worked to make leisure here an open, inclusive reality in the first half of the twentieth century. In shaping recreational sites and public spaces during the Jim Crow era, African Americans challenged white supremacy and situated Black identity within oceanfront and inland social gathering places throughout California.

March 19 @ 11:00 am - 7:00 pm
Japanese American National Museum, 100 N. Central Ave.
Los Angeles, CA United States
Free

Aki’s Market: Japanese American National Museum

Glenn Kaino: Aki’s Market is inspired by Akira and Sachiye Shiraishi’s small neighborhood market (1957–1970) in East Los Angeles. Created by artist Glenn Akira Kaino (Akira’s grandson and namesake), the exhibition explores the transgenerational trauma from the World War II Japanese American incarceration experience through the stories of Kaino, his family, and the community. It is also an interrogation of the American practice of displacement—collapsing almost 100 years of cultural subjugation into a spiritual, exploratory space from which the building…

March 19 @ 11:00 am - 5:00 pm
Event Series Event Series (See All)
The Broad, 221 S. Grand Ave.
Los Angeles, CA 90012 United States
Free

Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog)

The Broad is pleased to announce Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog), an exhibition drawn entirely from the Broad collection, showcasing works by Los Angeles-based artists. Drawing its title from a John Baldessari work, the exhibition includes reflections on L.A. as a city in flux, and on societal issues that extend far beyond it. The show includes the work of 21 artists across varying generations who were raised in the Los Angeles area, or relocated to the city.   Tuesdays,…

March 19 @ 11:00 am - 6:00 pm
Event Series Event Series (See All)
Hammer Museum, UCLA, 10899 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90024 United States
Free

Groove: Artists and Intaglio Prints, 1500 to Now

This exhibition surveys over five hundred years of intaglio prints drawn from the extensive collections of the UCLA Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts at the Hammer Museum. The intaglio medium comprises engravings, etchings, dry point, aquatint, and mezzotint, all of which involve the use of a copper or zinc plate that is incised, inked, and printed. These materials and techniques have remained more or less the same since the fifteenth century. The exhibit includes examples of Renaissance engraving, through…

Be in the Loop!

Receive notes about art, culture, and creativity in LA!


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: . You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact