Photography

Harvard’s campus and community through the lens of our photographers.

All from this series

  • Not just a humanities cat

    Meet Remy, Harvard’s resident cat by day, whose campus rambles have inspired a Facebook page with more than 1,000 followers.

  • Harvard’s sacred spaces

    New and old sacred spaces at Harvard encourage pause and reflection, for religious and mindful communities alike.

    Yaseen Eldik and Sanaa Nadim pray.
  • Art of chess

    Players bond and battle during Community Chess Weekend at Harvard’s Smith Campus Center.

  • The center in the crossroads

    Harvard’s redesigned Richard A. and Susan F. Smith Campus Center officially opened Sept. 20 with a dedication ceremony attended by Harvard President Larry Bacow, President Emerita Drew Faust, and members of the Harvard and Cambridge communities.

    Crowd gathers to watch movie at Smith Campus Center.
  • First-week impressions

    The fall semester is off to a busy start, with Harvard students scrambling to sample a variety of classes before settling on their course load.

  • Warm welcome for Class of 2022

    President Larry Bacow, Dean Claudine Gay, and other Harvard leaders welcomed the Class of 2022 to campus on move-in day.

  • A season for exploration

    At the third annual Summer Explorations series at the Harvard Ed Portal, local students of all ages experienced programs that enriched learning, stimulated curiosity, and explored everything from storytelling to ceramics to bike riding.

  • Red all about it

    Harvard and crimson are synonymous. But all over campus, brighter shades of red abound, too.

  • The Harvard-Yenching Library, by the numbers

    With 1.4 million volumes in more than a dozen languages, the Harvard-Yenching Library is the largest academic library for East Asian studies in the Western world.

  • STAGE struck

    Phillips Brooks House Association’s STAGE worked with Cambridge and Boston youth on the fundamentals of theater, exploring plot, characterization, improvisation, and more.

  • The myriad moments of Commencement

    The weeklong buildup to Commencement Day’s ancient and scripted rites is a feast for the eyes, the ears, the palate, but mostly the heart.

  • The ending as beginning: Commencement ’18

    Harvard’s annual Commencement is both a conclusion and a start for those graduating. But the day also is a gathering of the far-flung Crimson clan under tents and trees in…

    Harvard graduates wave books.
  • Rite of spring

    Crowds top 15,000 over the festival’s four days.

  • The weight of the ‘eights’ on her shoulders

    What she lacks in size she makes up for in volume as leader of the heavyweight varsity rowers.

  • A history of games at Houghton

    Explore the Harvard library’s treasure trove of games dating back to the 17th century.

  • It’s Housing Day, with snowballs

    As nor’easter slackens, Harvard freshmen throng the Yard after learning where they’ll live next, all part of the annual Housing Day.

  • John Harvard’s Charlestown

    After a recent snowfall, we explored the neighborhood of the University’s namesake and spoke with historian Rosemary Kverek of Charlestown and Cambridge Historical Commission Director Charles Sullivan.

    Engraved stone, John Harvard Mall, Charlestown.
  • ‘Sketching’ with clay

    Ben Owen III of North Carolina comes from a long line of potters. The master potter demonstrated his technique at a Harvard Ceramics Program workshop.

  • Making Harvard’s Houses home

    Some are new to the role while others are veterans, but their mission is the same: to create a community for their ‘extended family’ of students.

  • At Wintersession, fresh ways for students to explore

    Wintersession 2018 gave Harvard students some much-welcomed time to explore new fields and experiences.

  • Quidditch, anyone? Inside Harvard club sports

    Teddy Roosevelt boxed. Neil deGrasse Tyson wrestled. For generations, Harvard students have turned to physical activity for a break from study.

  • Study spaces call to students

    From Widener Library’s Loker Reading Room to the Harvard Art Museums’ Calderwood Courtyard, photos show Harvard’s most popular study spaces

  • In the Yard, inside the dorms

    A photo gallery of roommates in Harvard’s Class of 2020.

    Roommates Kristie Colton (from left), Georgia Seidel, and Rebecca Chen peak inside their room in Thayer Hall.