BAC HISTORY
In 1966, the BAC began efforts to lease empty Fire Station #3 on the border of Boston and Brookline. The building, designed by Peabody and Stearns and originally a chemical firehouse, was slated for demolition. In early 1968, The Town of Brookline consented to its use as an arts center and the BAC moved in. During the summer of that year, volunteers and professionals worked to clean and refurbish the building. On November 4, 1968, the BAC opened its first classes on the premises, and in that initial year, enrolled about 100 children. Since then, the building has been in continuous use by the BAC. We currently hold a 30-year lease with The Town of Brookline.
In 1999, the BAC established an endowment to provide a permanent and dependable source of assistance for financial aid and outreach programs. Three years later, a gallery on the first floor was opened with support from past Board President and long-time BAC supporter, Carol Hall. Today, the gallery provides a space for local, regional, and national artists to exhibit their work.
Our mission is as present today in all of our programs and activities as it was in our foundersβ basement so many years ago. With a faculty of professional working artists, rotating exhibitions, and community outreach, the BAC continues to focus on providing high-quality visual arts classes, exhibitions, and events for our community.
βArt is life,β Barney shared in his artist statement from a 2015 exhibition at the BAC, βand in every era artists reflect through their skills and philosophy what we are going throughβ¦My own feeling is that there is enough trouble in the world and I want to bring more humor and happiness for us to reflect on.β
Barnett Bernard Berliner was born January 1, 1925 on the Lower East Side of New York to his shoemaker father Harry and loving homemaker-mother Gertrude. After serving the US Army during World War II, he returned to New York to study architecture at The Cooper Union, where he met his bashert and wife of over 70 years, Marilyn Ada (Mim). He then moved to Boston for his graduate education in architecture at MIT and Harvard. A teacher, architect, artist and entrepreneur, he was a passionate supporter of the arts.
Barney lived each day of his life with zest, innate generosity and unbridled creativity, and always with deep pleasure in art and humor. A sweet and loving father, he consistently encouraged his children to pursue whatever made them happy. A practical joker, storyteller and artist, he was a unique and self-invented man who inspired many along his journey.
Marilyn βMimβ Ada (Klein) Berliner passed away on February 20, 2021 at the age of 93.
βMimβs compassion, hospitality and generosity, and her deep belief in making opportunities for creativity accessible to all, will continue to inspire us always,β her daughters, Susan and Nancy, shared.
Born on July 17, 1927 to Zelda, an office administrator, and Abraham, a rare book dealer, Mim grew up in Brooklyn, New York. As a child, she traveled uptown with her violin by subway for lessons, attended Erasmus High School, and later received her BA in Psychology from Brooklyn College. After meeting her beshert, Barney, over an office machine needing repair at Cooper Union, where she was working and he was a student, they married and moved to Boston. They later moved to Brookline, where they made their home for the rest of their lives and where their daughters Susan and Nancy were born and raised. Mim attended the Boston University School of Social Work, where she received her MSW and worked for many years at Beth Israel Medical Center, where she loved her work.
Passionate about the arts, she and Barney, together with several friends, developed the vision for and then started the Brookline Arts Center. Working initially as a volunteer, she subsequently became the Executive Director. Among the many contributions she made was the development of ways to make art classes accessible to more people, melding her passion for the arts and social justice. She will be remembered as a loving and supportive mother and for her love of her morning coffee, her creative and gourmet cooking, warm smile, hospitality and generosity, talents as a skilled and compassionate listener and confidante. A world traveler, she and Barney welcomed many people from around the world into their home and lives.
Mim and Barney will be profoundly missed by their loving family, caregivers and friends. We are so grateful for the impact they made on all our lives and the Town of Brookline. May their memory always be a blessing. Our thoughts, prayers and love are with their family.