Organization ·

Valley House Gallery & Sculpture Garden


Founded in 1954, Valley House Gallery & Sculpture Garden is Texas' most enduring fine art gallery. The Modernist-style gallery, along with the 4+ acre sculpture garden, is located in its original North Dallas location. Valley House Gallery represents established and emerging contemporary artists working in traditional media, deals in important American and European art, and specializes in reintroducing significant Early Texas art. In addition to presenting exhibitions in the gallery and throughout the sculpture garden, Valley House Gallery publishes scholarly catalogs, participates in national art fairs, and assists museums in curating exhibitions. In 1964, Valley House Gallery was the first gallery in Texas invited to join the prestigious ADAA (Art Dealers Association of America.) The gallery is also a founding member of both DADA (Dallas Art Dealers Association) and CADD (Contemporary Art Dealers of Dallas.) Second generation owners Cheryl and Kevin Vogel invite visitors to enjoy a unique art and garden experience.



Hours
Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The gallery and garden are closed on Sunday
Please call for holiday hours.

Admission
Free

Update this page
Visitor Information

Valley House Gallery & Sculpture Garden
6616 Spring Valley Road
Dallas, TX 75254
972.239.2441 phone

visit website
map & directions

Directions & Parking
The gallery is located on Spring Valley Road between Preston and Hillcrest in Far North Dallas. Parking is available in front of the gallery.

Other Information
Among the contemporary artists represented are Chad Airhart, René Alvarado, Deborah Ballard, Vera Barnett, Lu Ann Barrow, Lloyd Brown, Ron Cheek, Brian Cobble, Robert D. Cocke, James Dowell, David Dreyer, David Everett, Philip Evett, David FeBland, Henry Finkelstein, Barnaby Fitzgerald, Bart Forbes, Lilian Garcia-Roig, David H. Gibson, Tracy Hicks, Cindi Holt, Sedrick Huckaby, Anita Huffington, Mark Messersmith, Fred Nagler, Robert Peterson, Kelly Porter, Jane Starks, Jim Stoker, Donna Phipps Stout, Bob Stuth-Wade, Valton Tyler, Mary Vernon, Anne Weary, Jim Woodson, Tom Woodward, and Miguel Zapata.

Among the Early Texas artists frequently exhibited are Heri Bert Bartscht, Reveau Bassett, Fred Darge, Otis Dozier, Edward G. Eisenlohr, Constance Forsyth, L. O. Griffith, Veronica Helfensteller, DeForrest Judd, Edmund D. Kinzinger, William Lester, Florence McClung, Blanche McVeigh, Loren Mozley, Josephine Oliver, Julian Onderdonk, Robert Preusser, Dickson Reeder, Everett Spruce, Olin Travis, Charles Umlauf, Bror Utter, Donald S. Vogel, Velox Ward, Clara McDonald Williamson, and Dan Wingren.

Among the 19th and 20th century American and European artists shown are Francois Baron-Renouard, Tom Benrimo, Thomas Hart Benton, Harry Bertoia, Hugh Breckenridge, Jean-Marie Calmettes, Francis Chapin, Rene-Auguste Flandrin, Antonio Grediaga Kieff, Walt Kuhn, Auguste Louis Lepère, Fred Nagler, Lucien Ott, Georges Rouault, Sergio Signori, and Claude Venard.