Showing posts with label Huntington Library. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Huntington Library. Show all posts

Monday, July 17, 2023

Einstein's Eighth Wonder

"Red Earth" by Lita Albuquerque
My prosperous retirement--not quite a decade old--is living proof that Einstein was right. “Compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world. He who understands it, earns it … he who doesn’t … pays it.” So imagine how a real fortune has increased in value over nearly a century. You don't have to if you visit the Huntington in San Marino. It's one of the richest cultural institutions in the United States with an endowment of more than $400 million. Take a stroll in the extensive botanical garden--they cover 120 acres, beautifully--and you'll see how they spend some of that loot.  

Desert Garden
Italian Cypress Bonsai
The Huntingtons, who died in the 1920s, lived long enough to enjoy the serenity of the exquisite Japanese Garden.




But the Chinese Garden wasn't landscaped until this century.  I can't say I've ever seen anything quite like it.  A trio of Instagramming Asians seemed to agree.





See for yourself.  Just avoid the heat of the day!


More Los Angeles:


Odd Couple

When I mentioned to Steve, our Art Deco guide in DTLA, that we had tickets for the gardens at the Huntington, he brightened immediately.  "Make sure you see who they've paired the Blue Boy with."

"The Blue Boy" by Thomas Gainsborough (ca 1770)
You see the iconic Gainsborough work hanging at the far end of the Thornton Portrait Gallery, mostly filled with the ghosts of long-forgotten 18th century British aristocrats.


Needless to say, they look nothing like colorful bloke at the opposite end.

"A Portrait of a Young Gentleman" by Kehinde Wiley (2021)
The curatorial staff deserves a shout-out for commissioning Wiley to shake up the Huntington in a way that perfectly complements the artist's own vision of elevating African Americans.  


That said, you have to wonder what Henry and Arabella would have thought about the pairing.  Henry, born into a family with a railroad fortune, made his own pile by connecting Los Angeles with a 24/7 street car system in the early 20th century and investing in the subsequent real estate boom.

Henry E. Huntington (1850-1927)
After divorcing his first wife,  Henry wed his wealthy uncle's widow, a former gold digger of mysterious origins who already had inherited a Vermeer and a Rembrandt.  Instead of having children together, they collected art.

Arabella Huntington (ca 1850/51-1924)
We'd come to see the botanical gardens which left us no time to visit the free-standing library, one of the world's largest private collections.  But the portrait gallery is housed in the couple's former home which had floor-to-ceiling bookcases in several rooms.


You'll find the author of Tristram Shandy, the Anglicized version of Cervantes's epic novel in the portrait gallery, too.  I had to read both in college.  Definitely long slogs!

Laurence Sterne by Joseph Nollekens (after 1766)
Eighteenth-century England isn't a place where my time machine would make a stop, but some of the furnishings in what is now called the European Gallery were lovely.


 

Green Jasper Plaque with the Discovery of Achilles (partial, 1788)
Medusa Head
British Music Cabinet Decoration (ca 1895)
Portrait Bust of Nero (Italian, 17th Century)
More recent additions included a dozen plates called "The Autobiography of a Garden," created by Andrew Raftery from 2009-2016.  They reminded me of Randy.

"Reading Seed Catalogs" (January) 
"Planting Seeds" (February) 
"Watering the Cold Frame" (March) 
"Edging the Beds" (April) 
"Cultivating Lettuce" (May)
"Training a Passion Vine" (June)
"Fertilizing" (July) 
"Deadheading" (August)
 "Mowing" (September)
"Bringing in Chrysanthemums" (October) 
"Digging Dahlia Tubers" (November)
"Contemplating the Snow" (December)