Community Day at Shining Light on Truth: Black Lives at Yale & in New Haven
The public is welcome to gather at the Schwarzman Center to experience guided tours, reflections, and personal engagement with the exhibition designers, curators, and contributors. Guided tours are available from 11:30am through 1:00pm and from 2pm through 3:30pm. Join us for remarks from the exhibition team from 1pm-2pm in the Presidents’ Gallery on Floor 2.
Guided tours meet in the President's Gallery and are available during these timeframes:
- 11:30am-1:00pm
- 2pm-3:30pm
Remarks in the Presidents' Gallery on Floor 2: 1pm-2pm
About the exhibition:
Installed at the Schwarzman Center, “Shining Light on Truth: Black Lives at Yale & in New Haven,” illuminates ongoing research that recovers the essential role of Black people throughout Yale and New Haven history. The exhibition puts back at the center of local storytelling people who have always been central to local history. It celebrates Black community building, resistance, and resilience on campus and in New Haven.
The show includes nearly one hundred images of Yale’s earliest Black students from the 1800s and early 1900s, many of whom had deep New Haven connections. The Schwarzman exhibition features compelling reproductions of photographs of New Haveners who were custodians of Yale. The Luke, Grimes, Creed, Park, and Bassett families, among the many people key to founding and sustaining Yale, and who are heralded in the show.
“Shining Light on Truth: Black Lives at Yale & in New Haven” showcases the proposal, made and thwarted in 1831, to build a Black college in New Haven. It also highlights the successful efforts of Black students in the 1960s to establish the Afro-American Cultural Center and Afro-American Studies at Yale.
This exhibition brings forth knowledge kept alive in archives and memory for many centuries—even when the dominant culture chose to ignore, bury, or forget. It extends the work of the Yale and Slavery Research Project and follows from the exhibition, “Shining Light on Truth: New Haven, Yale and Slavery,” at the New Haven Museum from February 16, 2024 – March 1, 2025.
The exhibition team includes David Jon Walker ’23 MFA, lead designer, and Michael Morand ’87 ’93 M.Div., lead curator, with Timeica Bethel ’11, Robert Laird Brown, Jennifer Coggins, Mohamed Diallo ’26, Regina Mason, Hope McGrath, Carlynne Robinson, and Charles Warner, Jr.
Admission
Free and open to the public.
SIGN UP No registration required but sign up to let us know you plan to attend
Guided tours are available during this timeframe and meet in the Rotunda
11:30am-1:00pm
2pm-3:30pm
Remarks in The Presidents' Gallery on Floor 2
1pm-2pm
(This exhibition is also open to the public to view outside of the guided tours. Please check building hours to plan your visit.)









