1. “This Land Is…” at the Huntington
    Photograph: Michael Juliano for Time Out | “This Land Is…" at the Huntington
  2. “This Land Is…” at the Huntington
    Photograph: Michael Juliano for Time Out | “This Land Is…" at the Huntington
  3. “This Land Is…” at the Huntington
    Photograph: Michael Juliano for Time Out | “This Land Is…" at the Huntington
  4. “This Land Is…” at the Huntington
    Photograph: Michael Juliano for Time Out | “This Land Is…" at the Huntington
  5. “This Land Is…” at the Huntington
    Photograph: Michael Juliano for Time Out | “This Land Is…" at the Huntington
  6. “This Land Is…” at the Huntington
    Photograph: Michael Juliano for Time Out | “This Land Is…" at the Huntington
  7. “This Land Is…” at the Huntington
    Photograph: Michael Juliano for Time Out | “This Land Is…" at the Huntington
  8. “This Land Is…” at the Huntington
    Photograph: Michael Juliano for Time Out | “This Land Is…" at the Huntington

Review

This Land Is…

4 out of 5 stars
  • Things to do, Exhibitions
  • Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, San Marino
  • Recommended
Michael Juliano
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Time Out says

Borrowed from Woody Guthrie’s egalitarian folk anthem, the title of this exhibition at the Huntington offers a pretty literal teaser of what you can expect to see: lots of relics tied to land, specifically American land. But that lens provides an insightful and profound perspective on 250 years of ambition, achievement, struggle, exclusion and belonging in the United States.

There are some truly remarkable documents on display here: two annotated early printings of the Declaration of Independence; hand-drawn estate plans from George Washington and Thomas Jefferson; manuscripts and notes from Walt Whitman, Langston Hughes and Octavia E. Butler; and Guthrie’s original lyrics sheet for “This Land is Your Land,” paired with one of his acoustic guitars with a faded proclamation that “this machine kills fascists” scratched into the back.

The theme of land embraces botany, national park brochures and surveys of the Colorado River, but also considers the impacts of America’s territorial takeovers, spotlights artwork made along the Mexican border and tells the story of a Japanese family in Los Angeles forced out of their flower farm and into an internment camp during WWII. The most humbling piece on display just might be the one that first greets you: the cross section of an oak tree that stood on the grounds of the Huntington for 250 years.

Details

Address
Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens
1151 Oxford Rd
San Marino
91108
Price:
Included with admission ($29–$34)
Opening hours:
Wed–Mon 10am–5pm

Dates and times

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