Splashes of eye-catching color brighten campus scenes
Rose Lincoln
Harvard Staff Photographer
2 min read
Harvard and crimson are synonymous. But all over campus and in nearby Harvard Square, brighter shades of red abound, too, in a Science Center mural, at bike racks and in traffic, on art museum walls, and in tourists’ garb.
Cherry red couches — and a suspended whale skeleton — invite conversation in the Northwest building basement. Seven years of Housing Day T-shirts at Adams House favor red.
Finding your bike is easy when it’s red. A street off Brattle Square is nearly all gray.
Red shapes punctuate Constantino Nivola’s 1954 landscape mural “Olivetti Showroom Wall Relief” in the Science Center.
A gilded eagle perched in the organ loft of Memorial Church reflects tones from the red carpet. Shafts of sunlight illuminate prayer books at Memorial Church.
Business leader Joseph Y. Bae ’94 and novelist Janice Y. K. Lee ’94 expand upon three decades of supporting academic excellence, opportunity at Harvard