Art and Fashion

The Huntington’s 2025 Collection Includes 1970 Work by Judy Chicago

The Huntington, a Los Angeles-area cultural institution home to art museums, libraries and botanical gardens, has announced a gift to the art collection funded by the Huntington Art Collectors Council. Each year, a committee selects works for acquisition based on recommendations from museum curators.

This year’s collection includes a London view by 17th-century Dutch artist Thomas Wijck; an 1872 bust of a black woman bound by ropes by French sculptor and abolitionist Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux; an early work by feminist artist Judy Chicago; and a 19-year-old painting by African-American painter, surveyor and lithographer Grafton Tyler Brown. a fin-de-siècle landscape; a scroll from the early 1800s by Chinese painter Zhao Yuan; and a tapestry by contemporary Kashmiri-British artist Raqib Shaw.

These gifts join an earlier 2025 gift to the institution from Deborah Last and Jay and Deborah Last Collections. These include sculptures by Henry Moore, Jacques Lipschitz, and Harry Bertoia; prints by Frank Stella and Andy Warhol; and works on paper from the 19th and early 20th centuries by Americans James McNeill Whistler, Henry Farrell, and John Sloan.

In addition, Huntington trustee Mei-Lee Ney donated eight works by Cuban-born American artist Enrique Martinez Celaya, the Huntington’s first visual arts fellow, to the museum, adding to the museum’s existing collection of the artist’s work. The gift spans Zelaya’s 25-year career, which includes painting, sculpture, mixed media, drawing and photography.

Below are five works donated to the Huntington Museum by the Huntington Art Collectors Committee.

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