Photography

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

All from this series

  • At your service

    More than 1,500 first-year students rolled up their sleeves and went to work across Greater Boston on Thursday for the Class of 2023 Day of Service.

  • Their favorite things

    The Gazette asks first-year students to name the most cherished thing in their suitcases.

  • Making themselves at home in Harvard Yard

    No blood, but some sweat and a few tears were on display as first-years moved into their Harvard Yard dorms Tuesday.

    Students carrying a couch
  • A summer of helping

    Harvard College first-year Ezra Feder spends his summer doing public service through Artists For Humanity, a nonprofit that provides employment in art and design to lower-income teens in the city.

    Harvard first year student standing in front of student artwork on wall.
  • Summer explorers

    For the fourth year, Harvard’s Summer Explorations helped local students stay sharp over the school break while learning in free weeklong workshops at the Ed Portal in Allston.

    Luke Scanlon acts like an airplane during the American Repertory Theater workshop.
  • Passing the barre

    A photo gallery captures the hard work leading up to Harvard Ballet Company’s recent performance.

    Feet of a dancer in the “B-Plus” position.
  • The simple joy of pets

    Phillips Brooks House program brings dogs to a local rehab center to interact with residents.

    Man holding small dog
  • Chicken soup for the soul

    Harvard Divinity School graduate Israel Buffardi experienced an unconventional journey to his Unitarian Universalist ministry.

    Israel Buffardi faces congregants sitting at tables outside, holding up focaccia he made for a Sacred Supper.
  • Shining Commencement moments, captured

    Not lost amid Harvard’s definitive ritual of revelry and accomplishment were the 6,665 graduates and their families, whose years of labor and sacrifice led them to the day.

    Angela Merkel speaks from podium.
  • Crimson EMS in action

    A student-run emergency medical services organization at Harvard, Crimson CMS facilitates the training, certification, and volunteer service of EMTs.

    Terzah Hill observes Evan Komorowski and Thomas Wobby moving a gurney.
  • Step, sing, and dance in time

    The Harvard community came out to join in the 2019 Arts Festival with live music and dance performances, arts and crafts, theater, and more.

    Parker Quartet and Brattle Street Chamber Players perform on stage.
  • Rocking the House(s)

    Harvard Housing Day, when first-year students learn what House they’ll be living in beginning sophomore year, is a big celebration

  • The beauty of the book in all its forms

    For last semester’s seminar “Harvard’s Greatest Hits,” David Stern got about a dozen first-year students in a room and had them examine some of the rarest and oldest volumes at Houghton Library, Harvard’s rich and vast repository of art, culture, history and much, much more.

    Eliot Indian Bible.
  • Science fare

    To highlight the range of research being done in Harvard’s science labs, we recently visited students doing hands-on work in fields from quantum science to biology to chemical engineering.

  • Embracing motion and stillness

    Harvard staff photographer Rose Lincoln finds moments of motion and stillness, giving you a reason to pause.

    Visitors walk the path from Memorial Church toward Widener Library.
  • Winter warm-up

    Harvard Wintersession students picked up new skills during the break with classes that ranged from joke-writing to synthetic biology.

  • From sea to dining hall table

    A partnership between a local fish wholesaler and Harvard University Dining Services puts fresh seafood on students’ and faculty members’ plates twice a week.

  • Catching up with the Class of ’48

    Photo gallery profiles six Harvard alumni over 90 who show no sign of slowing down.

  • Playing The Game, both past and present

    Photo gallery of scenes from the 135th playing of The Game, Harvard-Yale football at Fenway Park.

  • 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.