And our final 2026 Taliesin Prize winner is Raphael Tourette, concentrator in Applied Math (CS) with a secondary in History of Art and Architecture.
Read about Raphael's journey on our instagram @harvard.arts.hum
Our next Taliesin Prize winner is Max A. Palys, concentrator in Math and East Asian Studies.
"Every discipline I have pursued has been, at its core, a language: a way of moving meaning from one mind to another."
Read more about Max's journey on our instagram @harvard.arts.hum
Meet Frank Liu, one of the 2026 Taliesin Prize winners! Frank had a double concentration in English Honors and Molecular and Cellular Biology.
Read more about Frank's journey on our instagram @harvard.arts.hum
Schlesinger Library’s scrapbook collection offers scholars insights into hidden stories, texture of everyday life in bygone eras.
https://t.co/5o4LuA7fFm
We are so excited to bring you a new educational podcast, called Ancient Greece Today!
This project is a collaboration with Harvard’s Center for Hellenic Studies. Learn more at https://t.co/KpiEJWKOYY
A Harvard senior who once envisioned a future in politics finds her path unexpectedly reshaped by a powerful discovery in the studio, as painting becomes not just a passion but a new way of imagining purpose, ambition, and impact.
https://t.co/yMYpDGNW0l
When a fictional character becomes too real: why Catherine Lacey can’t avoid ‘terrifying’ disclosures on the page and every story feels like her last
https://t.co/xMPRwBArZ5
Join us on Thursday, April 9th for a conversation with musician Aaron Goldberg, hosted by Sean Kelly, Dean of Arts and Humanities.
https://t.co/NN5wYvvLEj
Harvard in 1776: Presented by the Department of History.
Join us for a series of events and conversations about America's founding and Harvard's role in it.
https://t.co/o6fUE4VEWr
What karaoke taught Elizabeth McCracken about fiction: in new guide to writing, novelist details value of being able to live with failure — and why she no longer sings in public.
https://t.co/bp0uo7vVL1