Brookfield, CT
Brookfield, CT, Keeping History Alive
A group of Brookfield High School students stand before their easels, painting on canvas. Although this is just an exercisethe students are in a semicircle around their subject, a bust on a tabletheyre serious about what theyre doing.Art is like that in Brookfield. Tucked into the hills of rural western Connecticut, the town itself is like a painting of a New England villagein this case, a village that might easily have succumbed to growth pressure, but instead found ways to keep history alive.
Founded in 1788, Brookfield remained a quiet farm community for almost 200 years. Then, in the 1960s, it became one of the fastest growing towns in Fairfield County. Only 75 miles from Manhattan, the historic village was a magnet for New Yorkers, and still is. With a population nearing 15,000, it has little more room to grow.
But while elements of sprawl have touched Brookfields edges, much of the town, especially the area bordering Lake Lillinonah, has remained intact. Early American architecture is still strongly apparent, a 200-acre park graces the center of Brookfields national historic district, and the towns historical society museum includes a 9-acre colonial garden. Timely planning and zoning have guided growth and largely protected the towns character.
Perhaps even more importantly, for nearly 50 years the town has been keeping historic traditions alive by supporting a remarkable school for artisansthe Brookfield Craft Center. Since 1954 the center has been a living monument to the practical and artistic skills of the towns colonial pasta centerpiece of historical pride.
The center hosts classes in everything from blacksmithing to woodworking, papermaking, ceramics, and glassblowing. Workshops are structured to accommodate everyone from beginners to experts.
Were one of only a dozen or so national, nonacademic craft schools, says John I. (Jack) Russell, the centers director since 1980.
With an annual budget of about $750,000, he says the school is looked at as a new model for managing nonprofits, and in 1982 received the states highest recognition for excellence in the arts, The Connecticut Arts Award.
Tuitions cover all operational costs, with renovation of facilities being covered by grants and fund-raising. That means day-to-day operations pay for themselves, Russell notes. Workshops cost about $100 a day and draw faculty and students from across the country.
Area businesses pay the tuition of any high school student in the region who wants to take a class, and many do. Artisans who are strapped for funds can apply for scholarships. In 20 years, Russell says, Ive never turned down an application. Classes arent inexpensive, but access is almost universal.
Several students have told me theyve taken the skills and values theyve learned here and passed them on to other students at the high school, Russell adds. And some of our students have gone on to professional art schools.
The centers campus is partly historical, partly a work in progress. Located on 2.5 acres along the Still River in the historic district, the facility includes five buildings. An old mill houses the administrative offices, along with an exhibition gallery and a retail shop.
Next to the mill is a summer cottage renovated into an art studio. Across the river is an old house where visiting faculty usually stay for weekend workshops. Behind the old home is its ancient barn, with classes in ceramics, woodworking, and papermaking. Nearby is a small building devoted to blacksmithing.
Hundreds of volunteers maintain the schools buildings, and faculty membersmany of them nationally respected artistssettle for travel expenses and a modest honorarium to teach here.
Were working hard to maintain our rural character, says Brookfield First Selectman Martin Foncello. Quite a few town people are on the craft center board. Its a good cross-section. The craft center is a crown jewel right there in a very strategic location.
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