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ArtReach

Established in 1997, our community outreach program, ARTreach provides accessible art and cultural opportunities for low-income children, teens, adults, and seniors. This program has been a valuable resource for our community and we are committed to deepening its impact.

Since its beginning, the BAC’s Artreach programs have provided free and accessible arts and cultural opportunities for all ages, backgrounds, and abilities through additional partnerships with several different organizations to increase access and equity in the arts
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Our Community Partners
Art & AutismIn collaboration with Brookline High School and the Autism Higher Education Foundation (AHEF), the BAC created a program which provides a semester-long art class for young adults ages 18-22 with autism and related disabilities. We offer students a creative outlet to encourage and develop their interests, communication and skills.
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Brookline Community PlaygroupThe Brookline Community Playgroup is a free weekly parent-child learning experience that takes place unique spaces around the Brookline area.
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Parentchild+ParentChild+ uses education to break the cycle of poverty for low-income families. The organization engages early in life and helps toddlers, their parents, and their family child care providers access a path to possibility.
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Women ThrivingWomen Thriving aims to co-create opportunities for women with low income to thrive through learning, leadership development, and community. Their commitments include acceptance and inclusion, respect, collaboration, strengths and expectations, leadership, and integrity. Women Thriving recognizes the problems that women with low-income face and actively works to address these problems.
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Brookline Food PantryBrookline Food Pantry is open to Brookline residents who are in need of food assistance.
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InformationOur community outreach program, ARTreach, was established in 1997 to provide accessible art and cultural opportunities for low-income children, teens, adults, and seniors. This program has been a valuable resource for our community and we are committed to deepening its impact.

The BAC partnership with BEEP’s ParentChild+ established toddler/parent partnership classes as an extension of the support provided to low-income families through the ParentChild+ Program. ParentChild+ is a national model providing low-income families with once-weekly visits by an early childhood specialist who provides toddlers and their parents with learning opportunities in an inclusive environment. The playgroups run by ParentChild+, as part of their program, serve families weekly at two Public Housing sites (pre-COVID). Approximately 90% of the families are English Language Learners. While ParentChild+ does not track other demographic data of their participants, we know they are representative of the Brookline demographic population defined in Understanding Brookline: A Report on Poverty (Low-income families in Brookline are made up of Latino -19.4%-, Identified as Mixed race-15.3%, Asian-13.5%, Black-13.1%, and White -11.6%). 

Beginning in late 2021, BAC partnered with another BEEP program, the Brookline Early Childhood Community Playgroups, a free weekly parent-child learning experience. BAC is providing free space for these classes, led by Jenny Chu and Zong Liu, provided to children aged 2 to 4 years of low-income families who do not already attend a school program.

Our new partner, Early Autism Services, has its own Diversity and Inclusion Team who help train the EAS Behavioral therapists. This is a group of individuals whose mission is to cultivate an atmosphere of respect and acceptance for all employees and the families they serve. EAS strives to be a place where all backgrounds, ethnicities, orientations, identities, nationalities, and abilities will be seen, heard, and valued.

We are deeply committed to providing opportunities in the arts for low-income families. There is a substantial need for positive activities for children living in poverty, particularly in the arts. The Brookline Community Foundation’s “Understanding Brookline” report notes “5.7% of children ages 6 to 11 live in poverty households.” By coordinating with our partners at BEEP, the Brookline High Bridge Program, and Early Autism Services, there is an opportunity to further build community connections that foster a supportive and nurturing environment and increase opportunities extended to low-income children and families living in
Brookline.



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Brookline Arts Center


86 Monmouth Street, Brookline MA 02446

Office Hours:
Mon-Fri: 9:30a – 5:30p

Gallery Hours: 
Wed-Fri:  2:00 – 8:00p
Saturday: 11:00a – 4:00p
(Closed 12/21–1/1)