Fall 2001
History of Student Research |
[Exhibits]
Through - October 2001
School of Medicine: History of the Student Thesis at Yale. Sterling Hall of Medicine. Free and open to the public.
Sterling Hall of Medicine, Medical Library, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT
Mon - Fri 8:30 a.m. - 12 noon, Sat 10 a.m. - 7 p.m., Sun 10 a.m. - noon
United Nations Oral History Collection at Yale |
[Exhibits]
Through -- 2 November 2001
Yale Manuscript & Archives Library: Call 432-1735 for more information.
Sterling Memorial Library High Street
Myer Myers: Jewish Silversmith in Colonial New York |
[Exhibits]
Through -- 1 December 2001
Yale University Art Gallery: This exhibition will use Myers's exceptional silver and gold objects to examine larger issues in 18th-century American history. Myer Myers (1723-1795), one of the most accompl8ished craftsmen working in pre-industrial America, made superb-and in some cases unique-examples of American silver. Myers was the most productive silversmith working in New York during the late Colonial period and his ritual and secular silver is the largest body of extant work by a Jewish silversmith from anywhere in Europe or America prior to the nineteenth century. His work ranges from a gold snuffbox, a pierced-work basket, coasters, and a dish ring made for a prominent Loyalist, to five pairs of Torah finials for the three largest Jewish congregations in Colonial America.
Yale Art Gallery, 1111 Chapel Street, New Haven, CT 432-0600
Great British Paintings from American Collections: Holbein to Hockney |
[Exhibits]
Through -- 30 December 2001
Yale Center for British Art: This exhibition is the most comprehensive exhibition of masterpieces of British painting ever assembled in this country. It features over eighty paintings from both public and private collections, offering a fresh and beautiful account of the history of British painting from the sixteenth century to the 1990s. Lenders to the exhibition range from nationally famous museums, such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, to smaller collections that might own a single great British painting. Americans have been the most avid collectors of British painting outside Britain.
Yale Center for British Art, 1080 Chapel Street
`Wilde Americk': Discovery and Exploration of the New World, 1500-1850 |
[Exhibits]
Through -- 30 December 2001
Yale Center for British Art: This exhibition features some of the great landmarks in the mapping and exploration of the New World, from the great Age of Discovery to the mid-nineteenth century. Along with printed maps, atlases, and illustrated travel accounts, some extraordinary manuscript material will be on view, including a spectacular hand-drawn terrestrial globe probably created around 1522 by the astronomer and mathematician Johannes Schoner - the third oldest world sphere to survive. Also on display will be John Barnwell's manuscript map of the southeastern part of North America, drawn in 1721, an important political document forming the basis of subsequent mapping of the area until the American Revolution. The exhibition will feature one of the Center's great treasures, the earliest surviving manuscript map showing the route of Sir Francis Drake's circumnavigation of 1577-1580, produced for Queen Elizabeth I around 1587.
Yale Center for British Art, 1080 Chapel Street
Peru: From Village to Empire |
[Exhibits]
Through -- 3 January 2002
Peabody Museum of Natural History: The origin of empire in Peru, one of the few areas in the world where complex societies formed independently of outside influences, forms the subject of this new exhibition. The exhibition coincides with the events celebrating the University's Tercentennial. Drawing upon recent archaeological research, the exhibition traces the rise of complex society in Peru with particular attention placed on northern Peru.
Member's opening and reception Friday September 21 from 5:00 -7:00 p.m.
Peabody Museum, 170 Whitney Avenue
Yale Physicians Building Art Place |
[Exhibits]
Through -- March 2002
This exhibit features works by Yale University faculty and staff and local artists, including paintings, photographs, sculptures, pottery, quilts and weaving.
A reception and wine tasting sponsored by Mid-State Imports & Distributors on opening day from 5 - 7 p.m. For more information, call 203-785-5144 or visit www.info.med.yale.edu/yfp/artplace/Mainartplace.
Yale Physicians Building, 800 Howard Avenue, New Haven M-F 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Admission is free.
50 Years of Yale Art |
[Exhibits]
4 October -- 6 October 2001
School of Art: Dean Richard Benson will host an exhibition of alumni works highlighting 50 years of Yale art. This exhibition will be mounted in the School's new home on Chapel Street.
Holcombe T. Green, Jr. Hall, 1156 Chapel Street
A Library for its Time: Collections Then and Now |
[Exhibits]
4 October -- 21 December 2001
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library: Books known to have belonged to Yale in 1701 will be contrasted with the range of formats and subjects the Beinecke Library collects in 2001. Exhibition and accompanying publication prepared by Beinecke Library curatorial staff.
Beinecke Library, 121 Wall Street
Cross Campus, 1:00 p.m.
In case of inclement weather, the ceremony will be broadcast at locations around campus.
Edible Insects 2 |
[Exhibits]
6 October 2001
Peabody Museum of Natural History: It's back! Explore the role of insects in our lives at this day-long family event that focuses on the cultural and social aspects of the consumption of insects around the world. Enjoy crafts, storytelling, lectures, and other activities held throughout the museum-including a cooking demonstration.
Tours of the Peabody's entomology collections are available to Museum members. Preregistration is required, as space is limited. Call for information (203) 432-3776 or visit our web site at http://www.peabody.yale.edu.
Peabody Museum, 170 Whitney Avenue, New Haven, CT 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
A Yale Album, The Third Century |
[Exhibits]
Through 21 October 2001
A Tercentennial Photo Exhibition: The Masters of Jonathan Edwards College invite you to a showing of "A Yale Album, The Third Century. " This exhibition is divided into three sections. The first is a selection from Richard Benson's A Yale Album: The Third Century. These prints show the Yale community in many lights and act as a survey of Yale's past century.
The second section represents newly unearthed documents and photographs important to Jonathan Edwards College.
The third section was planned as an expansion of Benson's book. These newly chosen images have been divided into People, Places and Things.
October 4 - Master's Tea, 4pm - "Issues: The Presentation and Representation of Yale in Photographs and Photobooks" Richard Benson, Dean, Yale School of Art and John Gambell, University Printer. Reception to follow 5 - 7 p.m.
October 6 open for viewing during the Tercentennial Weekend 1 - 3 p.m.
Jonathan Edwards College Master's House, 70 High Street, New Haven Regular Exhibition hours: most Thursdays from 4 - 6 p.m. or by appointment 203-432-0356
History of the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library |
[Exhibit]
7 October- 1 November 2001
School of Medicine: Visit this historical photo exhibit located in the Medical Library Rotunda.
School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, 1st floor
ARCHIVES
Kurt Weill: A Centennial Celebration |
[Exhibits]
20 October -- December 2000
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library: An exhibition of musical manuscripts, biographical documents, and photographs documenting the life and career of the German-American composer, drawn from the Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya papers and prepared by Kendall Crilly, music librarian. In conjunction with the opening of this exhibition, the Yale College Opera Company will present three performances of Kurt Weill's short folk opera "Down in the Valley"; on October 20, 21, and 22.
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, 121 Wall Street
Theater and Anti-Theater in the 18th Century |
[Exhibits]
15 January --14 April 2001
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library: An exhibition of books, manuscripts, broadsides, and engravings documenting 18th-century controversies about the theater at Yale, in England, and abroad. Exhibition and accompanying catalog prepared by Vincent Giroud, curator of modern books and manuscripts at the Beinecke Library, in consultation with Joseph Roach, professor of English and Theater Studies.
Beinecke Library, 121 Wall Street
Yale-China Centennial Year Art Exhibitions |
[Exhibits]
15 January --15 December 2001
Yale-China: Over the course of Yale-China's Centennial year, and Yale's Tercentennial year, Yale-China will host a series of art exhibitions featuring works related to China, by members of the Yale and Yale-China communities.
The exhibit is open Monday - Friday from 9 - 5. Admission is free. The Yale China Association can be contacted for further information at 203-432-0880.
Yale-China Association 442 Temple St. (the corner of Temple and Trumbull), New Haven, CT.
Chariots of Steel: Yale & Rail |
[Exhibits]
Through 28 January 2001
Eli Whitney Museum: Each year the Eli Whitney Museum constructs a holiday train layout. Sustaining a tradition that goes back to the triumphant years of A.C. Gilbert's American Flyer Trains, they let the trains explore the history and culture that rail has shaped. This year's exhibition visits New Haven in 1913 and the opening of the Yale Bowl, whose mass audiences were a product of passenger rail. It was the dawn of modern scholastic athletics in America and the advent of a new identity for Yale and other institutions of higher education. It is a lively stop in the 300-year history that Yale will begin to celebrate in 2000. Eli Whitney graduated from Yale University in 1792 and is credited with the invention of interchangeable parts. He lived in New Haven for many years and died there in 1825. He is buried in Grove Street Cemetery. The exhibit schedule is as follows:
Wed., Thurs., Fri. 12 to 5
Sat. 10 to 3
Sun. 12 to 5
Admission is $2.00 for children and $3.00 for adults. The Eli Whitney Museum can be contacted for further information at 203-777-1833.
Eli Whitney Museum 915 Whitney Ave., Hamden, CT
Medicine at Yale, 1901 - 1951 |
[Exhibits]
Through March 2001
Yale School of Medicine: This photographic exhibit chronicles the history of the Yale Medical School.
Neighbors: Working Together for a Healthy New Haven |
[Exhibits]
Through - March 2001
Yale School of Medicine: Tercentennial Photograph Exhibit.
Sterling Hall of Medicine, Medical Library Rotunda, 333 Cedar Street
Yale's Legacy of Inventors |
[Exhibits]
Through - 6 May 2001
Eli Whitney Museum: In honor of Yale's 300th Birthday, we will celebrate Yale's legacy of inventors. Each month we'll look at an inventory, an epoch, and a challenge to be conquered . . . with a project you can take home. Appropriate for children 11 and above.
Pre-reservation is advised: the materials are unusual and limited.
All begin at 3pm
Fee: $18, $15 for members *add $5 for materials
February 11 - Whitney's Interchangeable Hearts: Produce multiple matching Valentines with Eli Whitney's system of jigs, with a project you can take home.
March 4 - Gibbs' Regulator: Construct a motor that thinks for itself about speed. Batteries included.
April 22 - MacCready's Gossamer Wings: Construct Ultra light flyers in the tradition of Paul MacCready's Gossamer Albatross.
May 6 - Bushnell's (submarine) Turtle: Construct a working replica (in a bottle) of the submarine which attacked the British Fleet.
Eli Whitney Museum 915 Whitney Ave., Hamden, CT Call 203- 777-1833
Yale: Crossing International Boundaries - A Tercentennial Retrospective |
[Exhibit]
January 19 - September 14, 2001
Manuscripts and Archives/Sterling Memorial Library: Drawing from the library's rich and diverse area studies and archival holdings, this exhibit explores the interconnections between international events and area studies scholarship at Yale. The evolving interests of faculty and students are reflected in the library's collections and provide the historical context for understanding how Yale has taught, studied, and influenced counties and cultures outside of the United States.
The first series focuses on Slavic & East European and Southeast Asian Studies; exhibitions on Judaica, Near Eastern, Africa, East Asia and Latin America will follow.
The final exhibit will explore Yale's connections with the world of international affairs and diplomacy and its opening coincides with the Yale Center for International & Area Studies symposia, "Envisioning the World in the Next Century: Challenges to Internationalizing Yale," September 14, 2001.
Yale's East European, Slavic & Southeast Asian Studies Collections: Archival Development and Collecting during Times of Turmoil, Transition & Peace
This exhibit will focus on the correlation between revolutionary and peace-time events which have occurred in two diverse geographic regions in Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia during the past 100 years. This collection helps document Yale scholarship outside national borders and reveals the role of Yale faculty and students in international affairs.
Manuscripts and Archives, Wall Street, New Haven. Call 432-1735 for more information.
Theater and Anti-Theater in the 18th Century |
[Exhibits]
15 January --14 April 2001
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library: An exhibition of books, manuscripts, broadsides, and engravings documenting 18th-century controversies about the theater at Yale, in England, and abroad. Exhibition and accompanying catalog prepared by Vincent Giroud, curator of modern books and manuscripts at the Beinecke Library, in consultation with Joseph Roach, professor of English and Theater Studies.
Beinecke Library, 121 Wall Street
Yale-China Centennial Year Art Exhibitions |
[Exhibits]
15 January --15 December 2001
Yale-China: Over the course of Yale-China's Centennial year, and Yale's Tercentennial year, Yale-China will host a series of art exhibitions featuring works related to China, by members of the Yale and Yale-China communities.
The exhibit is open Monday - Friday from 9 - 5. Admission is free. The Yale China Association can be contacted for further information at 203-432-0880.
Yale-China Association 442 Temple St. (the corner of Temple and Trumbull), New Haven, CT.
Chariots of Steel: Yale & Rail |
[Exhibits]
Through 28 January 2001
Eli Whitney Museum: Each year the Eli Whitney Museum constructs a holiday train layout. Sustaining a tradition that goes back to the triumphant years of A.C. Gilbert's American Flyer Trains, they let the trains explore the history and culture that rail has shaped. This year's exhibition visits New Haven in 1913 and the opening of the Yale Bowl, whose mass audiences were a product of passenger rail. It was the dawn of modern scholastic athletics in America and the advent of a new identity for Yale and other institutions of higher education. It is a lively stop in the 300-year history that Yale will begin to celebrate in 2000. Eli Whitney graduated from Yale University in 1792 and is credited with the invention of interchangeable parts. He lived in New Haven for many years and died there in 1825. He is buried in Grove Street Cemetery. The exhibit schedule is as follows:
Wed., Thurs., Fri. 12 to 5
Sat. 10 to 3
Sun. 12 to 5
Admission is $2.00 for children and $3.00 for adults. The Eli Whitney Museum can be contacted for further information at 203-777-1833.
Eli Whitney Museum 915 Whitney Ave., Hamden, CT
A Tribute to Sylvia Ardyn Boone, The New Haven Years: 1970 - 1993 |
[Exhibit]
10 - 17 February 2001
The Prince Hall Masonic Lodge of New Haven is organizing a special tribute to the life and work of Professor Sylvia Ardyn Boone, a scholar of African and women's art, and the first African-American woman to receive tenure at Yale. The tribute will feature panel discussions on Boone's legacy at Yale and an exhibit chronicling her life and work.
Sylvia A. Boone graduated from Brooklyn College in 1960 and received a master's degree from Columbia in 1964. She then studied for a brief period at the University of Ghana, where she began lifelong friendships with such prominent African Americans as W.E.B. DuBois, Malcolm X, and Maya Angelou.
Boone first came to Yale in the early seventies as a visiting lecturer in Afro-American Studies, and then went on to pursue her doctorate in art history. She joined the faculty in 1979 and received tenure in 1988. Professor Boone was a beloved and well-respected teacher, conducting classes on African art, aesthetics of female imagery in African art, masquerading and masks, and women's arts. She played a pivotal role in organizing the nationwide commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the 1839 "Amistad Affair," which is now an annual commemorative event in New Haven.
Alison Mackenzie Coordinator, Women Faculty Forum for the Tercentennial.
Tercentennial Office Telephone 203-432-8847 Fax 203-432-8828
Saturday, February 10
10am Sylvia A. Boone Exhibit opens to public, featuring photos, books, and memorabilia
11am-1pm PANEL: Sylvia Ardyn Boone: Her Legacy at Yale
Cheryl Finley, winner of the Boone Prize '98, Lyneise Williams winner of the Boone prize '00, Shirley Daniels '72, and Vera Wells '71
1pm-2pm Reception, Exhibit open to public
Sunday, February 11, 2001
11am Flowers at Battell Chapel in Honor of Boone
3pm-6pm PANEL: Beauty is a Duty: The Beauty Makers
Thursday, February 15, 2001
7pm Viewing of The Language You Cry In at the Afro-American Cultural Center or Luce Hall, Yale University
Saturday, February 17, 2001
10am Exhibit open to public
11am-1pm PANEL: Sylvia Ardyn Boone: Her Presence in New Haven
1pm-2pm Reception
All events will take place at the Little Red Schoolhouse,
Prince Hall Masons of New Haven, 106 Goffe St, New Haven CT 06511, 203-329-9957
Yale's Legacy of Inventors - Whitney's Interchangeable Hearts |
[Exhibits]
11 February 2001
Eli Whitney Museum: In honor of Yale's 300th Birthday, we will celebrate Yale's legacy of inventors. This month we'll produce multiple matching Valentines with system of jigs, with a project you can take home. Appropriate for children 11 and above. Pre-reservation is advised: The materials are unusual and limited. Begins at 3 p.m.
Fee: $18, $15 for members *add $5 for materials
Eli Whitney Museum, 915 Whitney Ave., Hamden, CT For information call 203- 777-1833
Exhibit
Harkness Hall
Medicine at Yale, 1901 - 1951 |
[Exhibits]
Through March 2001
Yale School of Medicine: This photographic exhibit chronicles the history of the Yale Medical School. Free and open to the public.
Sterling Hall of Medicine, Medical Library Rotunda, 333 Cedar Street
Neighbors: Working Together for a Healthy New Haven |
[Exhibits]
Through - March 2001
Yale School of Medicine: Tercentennial Photograph Exhibit. Free and open to the public.
Sterling Hall of Medicine, Medical Library Rotunda, 333 Cedar Street
Yale's Legacy of Inventors - Gibbs' Regulator |
[Exhibits]
4 March 2001
Eli Whitney Museum: In honor of Yale's 300th Birthday, we will celebrate Yale's legacy of inventors. This month we'll construct a motor that thinks for itself about speed. Batteries included. Appropriate for children 11 and above.
Pre-reservation is advised: the materials are unusual and limited. All begin at 3 p.m.
Fee: $18, $15 for members *add $5 for materials
Eli Whitney Museum 915 Whitney Ave., Hamden, CT Call 203- 777-1833
Creative Arts Workshop Celebrates Yale's Tercentennial: Yale School of Art Graduates at the Hilles Gallery |
[Exhibits]
16 March - 22 April 2001
This exhibit features artwork by seventy-five graduates of the Yale School of Art. Free and open to the public.
Mon - Fri, 9 - 5, Sat 9 - noon
Hilles Gallery, Creative Arts Workshop, 80 Audubon Street, New Haven, CT
Art For Yale: Defining Moments |
[Exhibits]
20 April --31 August 2001
Yale University Art Gallery: This major exhibition traces the history of the Yale Art Gallery from its founding in 1832 to the end of the twentieth century. There will be a "Defining Moments " reception on April 20, 2001 at the Art Gallery.
YUAG, 1111 Chapel Street, Tues - Sat 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sun 1 p.m. - 6 p.m.
School of Music: John Mauceri, BA '67, M Phil '70, will lead members of the Yale Symphony, the Yale Philharmonia, the Yale Glee Club, and the Yale Camerata in a gala concert of works by Strauss, Ives, Hindemith, Walton, Thompson, Parry, and Verdi.
After leading the Yale Symphony from 1968-1973, John Mauceri built a distinguished career with engagements with the world's foremost opera companies and symphony orchestras and with his work for musical theater and film. Admission is free and open to the public. This concert is being sponsored by Fleet Bank. Tickets are available at Yale300 Office, 2 Whitney Avenue, 1st Floor or the School of Music, 432 College Street. For information, call 203-432-0300.
Yale Chinese: Images from Home
[Exhibit/Student]
19 April 2001
Association of Chinese Students and Scholars at Yale (ACSSY): The Chinese students and scholars community forms the largest foreign student body here at Yale. This exhibit is a celebration of diversity and individuality in the Chinese community, as well as a truthful visual representation of China and some of its everyday citizens. It provides the Yale community with a fuller picture of its Chinese colleagues and friends: where they came from, how they grew up, and what kind of lives they led at home. This photographic exhibit opens Thursday, April 19th. For more information about ACSSY and the exhibit, please visit www.yale.edu/acssy . Admission is free. Call the Yale-China Association for more information 203-432-0880. This exhibit can also be viewed by special appointment.
9:00 - 5:00 M-F Yale-China Association, 442 Temple Street, New Haven, CT
Student Research Day
[Lectures]
20 April 2001
School of Medicine: Dr. Paul Greengard, 200 Nobel Laureate will deliver the Farr Lecture at the 15th Annual Student Research Day at 4:30 p.m. The activities begin at 12 noon with over 50 medical students presenting the results of their thesis research work at a scientific poster session. Also, five students whose research was selected for special honors will give oral presentations of their work. All presentations are in the Jane Ellen Hope Building.
12 noon - 4:30 pm, Jane Ellen Hope Building, 315 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT
Creative Arts Workshop Celebrates Yale's Tercentennial: Yale School of Art Graduates at the Hilles Gallery |
[Exhibits]
Through - 22 April 2001
This exhibit features artwork by seventy-five graduates of the Yale School of Art. On display are works in a wide range of media and styles from minimalist sculpture to landscape painting. Participating artists include Rudolph F. Zallinger, Jean Day Zallinger, Erwin Hauer, Norman Ives, Sheila Levrant de Brettville and more than 30 others. For more information about this event please contact Hilary Sierpinski, 562-4927 ext 14. Free and open to the public.
Mon - Fri, 9 - 5, Sat 9 - noon
Hilles Gallery, Creative Arts Workshop, 80 Audubon Street, New Haven, CT
Digital Art Exhibit
21 April - 23 May 2001
[Exhibits]
Digital Media Center for the Arts: Digital artwork by students, faculty and guest artists on exhibit through May. Please call DMCA at 432-8188 for more information.
DMCA Lobby, 149 York Street, New Haven, CT Mon- Fri 10 - 5, Sun 12 noon - 10 p.m.
Abstract Cisms
21 April 2001
[Concert]
Digital Media Center for the Arts: Kathryn Alexander presents an interactive concert. Continuous performances served "cybercafe style," in conjunction with the Digital artwork exhibit. For more information, call DMCA at 432-8188.
DMCA Lobby, 149 York Street, New Haven, CT
Yale's Legacy of Inventors - MacCready's Gossamer Wings |
[Exhibits]
22 April 2001
In honor of Yale's 300th Birthday, we will celebrate Yale's legacy of inventors. This month we'll construct ultra light flyers in the tradition of Paul MacCready's Gossamer Albatross. Appropriate for children 11 and above.
Pre-reservation is advised: the materials are unusual and limited. All begin at 3 p.m.
Fee: $18, $15 for members *add $5 for materials
Eli Whitney Museum 915 Whitney Ave., Hamden, CT Call 203- 777-1833
Microscopy: Tools of the Biochemical Sciences |
[Exhibits]
April 2001
School of Medicine: Martin E. Gordon, M.D. Free and open to the public.
Sterling Hall of Medicine, Medical Library, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT
Mon - Fri 8:30 a.m. - 12 noon, Sat 10 a.m. - 7 p.m., Sun 10 a.m. - noon,
Gloria
[Exhibits]
26 April 2001
Digital Media Center for the Arts: Special Project Presentation.Jack Vees and Libby van Cleve present Gloria. Times may change and new events are scheduled periodically; check this space or look for posters around campus. For more information about these eventsemail Laraine Sammler laraine.sammler@yale.edu). Directionsto the DMCA's 149 York Street facility are available online.
The Paul Mellon Bequest: Treasures of a Lifetime |
[Exhibits]
Through --29 April 2001
Yale Center for British Art: To honor its founder and patron, Paul Mellon, the Yale Center for British Art exhibits publicly for the first time works from Mr. Mellon's final gift to the museum. The exhibition includes eleven paintings by his favorite artist, George Stubbs, and eighteen oil sketches by John Constable. For more information on BAC exhibitions throughout the Tercentennial year, see www.yale.edu/ycba. Free and open to the public.
Center for British Art, 1080 Chapel Street
Yale's Legacy of Inventors - Bushnell's (submarine) Turtle |
[Exhibits]
6 May 2001
In honor of Yale's 300th Birthday, we will celebrate Yale's legacy of inventors. This month we'll construct a working replica (in a bottle) of the submarine that attacked the British Fleet. Appropriate for children 11 and above.
Pre-reservation is advised: the materials are unusual and limited. All begin at 3 p.m.
Fee: $18, $15 for members *add $5 for materials
Eli Whitney Museum 915 Whitney Ave., Hamden, CT Call 203- 777-1833
New Haven & Yale - Tercentennial Art Exhibition |
[Exhibit]
Through June 2001
Throughout the years, Yale University has been involved in many projects with New Haven Public Schools; many high school students take courses here, hundreds of students take part in Yale's National Youth Sports Program, and thousands of students visit the campus to attend concerts and athletics events and tour our museums and libraries.
Yale continues this tradition with the Tercentennial Art Exhibition, which features the art and photography of students from; Beecher School, Betsy Ross Arts Magnet School, Clinton Avenue School, Conte/West Hills Magnet School, Cooperative Arts & Humanities High School, East Rock Magnet School, Vincent Mauro School, Helene Grant School, Strong Magnet Academy, Troup Magnet Academy of Science.
Yale University Visitor Information Center, 149 Elm Street, t, New Haven, CT Hours are, Monday through Friday, 9 4:45 & 10 4:00 on the weekend.
Yale Physicians Building New Haven Art Place |
[Exhibits]
Through June 30, 2001
Works by Yale University faculty and staff. Also featuring the Art Place Quilters at Yale, presenting "The Fabric of our Lives". Free Admission, for information call 203 785-5144. Free and open to the public.
Monday - Friday 9am - 5pm, Yale Physicians Building, 800 Howard Avenue, New Haven
Medicine at Yale 1951 - 2001 |
[Exhibits]
Through - July 2001
School of Medicine: This visual exhibit is free and open to the public.
Sterling Hall of Medicine, Medical Library, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT
Mon - Fri 8:30 a.m. - 12 noon, Sat 10 a.m. - 7 p.m., Sun 10 a.m. - noon
Manuscript Commonplace Books |
[Exhibits]
23 July -- 29 September 2001
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library: An exhibition of British commonplace books of the 16th to the 19th century, drawn from the James M. and Marie-Louise Osborn Collection at the Beinecke Library. Exhibition and accompanying guide prepared by Earle Havens, graduate student in Renaissance Studies.
Beinecke Library, 121 Wall Street
Heinrich Schütz to Henry Miller: Selections from the Frederick R. Koch Collection |
[Exhibits]
Through --14 July 2001
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library: Musical, literary, and historical manuscripts from the Frederick R. Koch Collection. Exhibition and accompanying catalog prepared by Vincent Giroud, curator of modern books and manuscripts at the Beinecke Library. Free and open to the public.
Beinecke Library, 121 Wall Street, New Haven, CT Mon - Fri 8:30 - 5:00, Sat 10:00 - 5:00
A Gallery of Poems |
[Exhibit]
21 August - 4 November 2001
Yale University Art Gallery: This exhibition celebrating the publication of this book. Poetry readings at 3pm on September 6, October 4, and November 1. Visit www.yale.edu/artgallery for more information.
Yale Art Gallery, 1111 Chapel Street, New Haven, CT
EPH and the Yale School of Nursing |
[Exhibits]
August to September 2001
School of Medicine: Medical Library Rotunda
The Line of Beauty: British Drawings and Watercolors of the 18th Century |
[Exhibits]
Through -- 2 September 2001
Yale Center for British Art: This exhibition draws from the Yale Center for British Art's collection and includes works by William Blake, Thomas Gainsborough, and others. Free and open to the public.
Yale: Crossing International Boundaries - A Tercentennial Retrospective |
[Exhibit]
Through - September 14, 2001
Manuscripts and Archives/Sterling Memorial Library: Drawing from the library's rich and diverse area studies and archival holdings, this exhibit explores the interconnections between international events and area studies scholarship at Yale. The evolving interests of faculty and students are reflected in the library's collections and provide the historical context for understanding how Yale has taught, studied, and influenced counties and cultures outside of the United States.
The first series focuses on Slavic & East European and Southeast Asian Studies; exhibitions on Judaica, Near Eastern, Africa, East Asia and Latin America will follow.
The final exhibit will explore Yale's connections with the world of international affairs and diplomacy and its opening coincides with the Yale Center for International & Area Studies symposia, "Envisioning the World in the Next Century: Challenges to Internationalizing Yale," September 14, 2001.
Yale's East European, Slavic & Southeast Asian Studies Collections: Archival Development and Collecting during Times of Turmoil, Transition & Peace
This exhibit will focus on the correlation between revolutionary and peace-time events which have occurred in two diverse geographic regions in Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia during the past 100 years. This collection helps document Yale scholarship outside national borders and reveals the role of Yale faculty and students in international affairs. Call 432-1735 for more information. Free and open to the public.
Mon - Fri 8:30 - 4:45 Manuscripts and Archives, Wall Street, New Haven, CT
Access Yale! An Assistive Technology Exposition |
[Conference/Seminar/Symposium]
11 September 2001
Provost's Office: As part of the Tercentennial, the Provost's Advisory Committee on Resources for Students and Employees with Disabilities hosts an exposition of various technologies designed to support students and employees with disabilities. Demonstrations and hands-on use of the technologies will be offered to increase general awareness of resources available. Visitors will be eligible for raffle prizes and name tags produced in Braille. Everyone is welcome!
Cross Campus Courtyard, College Street 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Connecticut Freedom Trail Dedication |
[Exhibits]
13 September -- 15 September 2001
Gilder Lehrman Center, co-sponsors with the Amistad Committee, Hillhouse High School, and the New Haven Public Schools, dedicates the grave of James Hillhouse as a site on the Connecticut Freedom Trail. The event takes place at Grove Street Cemetery in New Haven at 10:00 a.m. The ceremony is followed by a reception and a movable exhibit of Hillhouse memorabilia, to open at the main branch of the New Haven Free Public Library on Thursday, September 13, and a forum at Hillhoue High School on Friday evening, September 14 on "James Hillhouse and His World."
Grove Street Cemetery, Grove Street, New Haven 10am
New Haven Free Public Library, College Street, New Haven immediately following Hillhouse High School, 480 Sherman Parkway, New Haven
Henry R. Luce Hall, 34 Hillhouse Avenue, New Haven, CT
