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- Arturo Schomburg's 4,600-item collection, bought by the New York Public Library in 1926, seeded a vast research archive.
- The exhibition To Uncover and Reveal to the World reconstructs Arturo Schomburg's library, curated by Dr. Laura E. Helton, through Dec 5, 2026.
- Decade-long archival work reconstructed materials that fueled the Harlem Renaissance; visitors now access rare books, pamphlets, artworks, and manuscripts.
- The show highlights early Black bibliophiles' collaborative networks across continents, emphasizing libraries as acts of resistance, empowerment, and cultural preservation.
- The Schomburg Center expands access through exhibitions, public programs, research fellowships, and digital initiatives, reinforcing Schomburg's mission.
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The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, one of the world’s premier institutions dedicated to preserving and illuminating the global Black experience, marks its centennial with renewed purpose, expanded scholarship, and a landmark exhibition that reconnects visitors with the origins of its vast collections. Located at the historic crossroads of 135th Street and Malcolm X Boulevard in Harlem, the Center continues to stand as a beacon of Black intellectual life, cultural memory, and community engagement.
Founded in 1925 as part of the New York Public Library system, the Center’s roots trace back to the extraordinary personal collection of Arturo “Arthur” Schomburg, a Puerto Rican–born scholar, bibliophile, and key figure of the Harlem Renaissance. Schomburg devoted his life to gathering books, manuscripts, artworks, and rare documents that affirmed the richness of African and African diasporic history. His mission was clear: to “uncover and reveal to the world” the contributions of people of African descent, an effort that challenged racist narratives and reshaped historical understanding. In 1926, the NYPL purchased his 4,600-item collection, planting the seed for what would become a research center now holding more than 11 million items.
Today, the Schomburg Center
honors that legacy with its current exhibition, “To Uncover and Reveal to the World: Arturo Schomburg’s Library,” on view through December 5, 2026. Curated by Dr. Laura E. Helton, the exhibition reconstructs Schomburg’s original library, long shrouded in mystery due to the absence of a surviving inventory. Over the past decade, librarians, archivists, and scholars have meticulously pieced together the contents of his foundational collection, revealing the breadth of his intellectual pursuits and the global scope of his research. Visitors can explore rare books, pamphlets, artworks, and manuscripts that shaped Schomburg’s vision and fueled the Harlem Renaissance’s cultural awakening.
The exhibition also highlights the collaborative world of early Black bibliophiles, men and women who built personal libraries as acts of resistance, empowerment, and cultural preservation. Schomburg’s network of fellow collectors, scholars, and activists helped him locate rare materials across continents and centuries, forming a community that understood the political power of historical knowledge.
As the Center celebrates 100 years, it
continues to expand access to Black history through exhibitions, public programs, research fellowships, and digital initiatives. Its centennial underscores not only a century of scholarship but also the enduring relevance of Schomburg’s mission in today’s cultural and political landscape.
For details on visiting the exhibition and exploring the Center’s offerings, go to nypl.org/uncoverandreveal.
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