David Berger (artist)

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David Berger (May 9, 1920 – November 15, 1966) was an American artist whose work is often categorized as representative of the Boston Figurative Expressionist movement. Berger was a professor of art at Massachusetts College of Art, where he had been a member of the faculty since 1957. He was also a professor of art at Framingham State College from 1946 to 1957.

Berger's parents came to the United States from Eastern Europe when they were children. The Berger family started and operated H. Berger Paper Company and then Koffman Paper, both in Massachusetts. And they were active in the local Jewish community. David was one of three children born to Edith (Koffman) Berger and Harry Berger in Lawrence, Massachusetts, in 1920. David attended public schools in Lawrence, Massachusetts, and while in middle school, he met Ruth Feldman, who would later become his beloved wife. He enrolled in Massachusetts College of Art, which was then called the Mass School of Art, married Ruth in 1943, and began military service in the U.S. Army.

His studies at the Massachusetts School of Art (now Massachusetts College of Art and Design; MassArt) were interrupted by his military service, but after the end of the war he returned to complete his education in the Teacher Education Department. During his senior year he began exhibiting his paintings. Berger received a Bachelor of Science in education from the Massachusetts College of Art in 1946. Following his graduation, he joined the faculty at Framingham State Teachers College. While employed there, Berger taught art appreciation, interior design, costume design, crafts, and introduction to art. He took a leave of absence from his teaching duties in 1949 to attend Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, where he received a Master of Fine Arts degree in 1950.

After graduation, he returned to Framingham State, where he taught until 1957 when he joined the faculty at Massachusetts School of Art. There he taught classes in painting and illustration. While at Mass Art, Berger continued to win juried art competitions and his work was exhibited widely, with solo exhibitions at the Gropper Gallery, Cober Gallery, the Kalamazoo Art Institute in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Pace Gallery, and others.

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