Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Gallery House

    4.7 (16 reviews)
    ModerateArt Galleries
    Open 11:00 am - 5:00 pm

    Gallery House Photos

    You might also consider

    Recommended Reviews - Gallery House

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    Reviews With Photos

    Second Friday event.. so fun!!!

    Gallery House is a Co- Op gallery run by 30 local artists practicing in 2D and 3D mediums. We have photography, painting, textile design, watercolor, mixed media, jewelry and ceramics. It is a quite a large gallery. Each artist is given 6 feet of space to display so there is quite a bit of art to view. Every Second Friday of the month there is a reception 5-7pm. Lots of goodies, music from Moods wine bar at 6pm , and always artists in attendance to answer any questions or just chat with. Families welcome.This June we will be celebrating our 65th Birthday with a fabulous reception on June 9th. We are also participating in SVOS with 11 artists this year. You enter through the Printer Cafe doors.Easy to get to!!

    Deb N.

    Next to the Printer's Inc Cafe, in the same building, entrance in the front and the gallery in the rear. Misc. artists and artwork ranges from jewelry, painting, photography, ceramics and small sculptures. Medium size space and friendly staff. Parking on the street and rear lot parking. Found it through Silicon Valley Open Studios http://www.yelp.com/biz/silicon-valley-open-studios-campbell but is open at all times with revolving artists.

    Some paintings that are currently on display at the Gallery House in the "First Sight" exhibit.

    See all

    2 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    2 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    3 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    3 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    7 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of sandy d.
    15
    32
    26

    3 years ago

    Great local artist and amazing work. Definitely check out their shows during this summer.

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Deb N.
    367
    1523
    5576

    17 years ago

    Helpful 3
    Thanks 0
    Love this 2
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Vi Y.
    561
    2489
    761

    17 years ago

    Helpful 2
    Thanks 0
    Love this 3
    Oh no 0

    9 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    7 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    17 years ago

    Helpful 2
    Thanks 0
    Love this 3
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Ile F.
    8
    293
    78

    17 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    16 years ago

    I went there for the first time last week. I was impressed - the diversity & quality of art was notable.

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    11 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    16 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    15 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    Ask the Community - Gallery House

    Review Highlights - Gallery House

    Gallery House is a separate business from the Printers Cafe which is in the front of the building.

    Mentioned in 2 reviews

    Read more highlights

    You might also consider

    Verify this business for free

    People searched for Art Galleries 972 times last month within 15 miles of this business.

    Verify this business

    Qualia Contemporary Art

    Qualia Contemporary Art

    5.0(3 reviews)
    1.4 mi

    Cute little gallery located in the heart of downtown Palo Alto! I think they feature local and…read moreinternational artists. I liked how it was very clean and informative - they had all the artist/painting information laid out as well as their books/prices. They have a main gallery room as well as another smaller side gallery. If you're exploring Palo Alto downtown or interested in art exhibitions, would recommend stopping by!

    Qualia Contemporary Art Gallery is a welcoming breath of fresh air in a high tech heavy…read moremetropolitan area without much attention given to cultural developments. Ms Daxue Xu, the artistic director of the gallery, and the guest curator Professor Xiaoze Xie from Department of Art and Art History in Stanford have a keen sense for art works that reflect the current socio-political and cultural changes on the global stage with an emphasis on how the East and the West arrive at the same place from different starting points. The artworks selected for exhibitions express the artists' sentiments and thoughts in a lucid and poignant manner that it is hard for the audience not to be touched in some way. Ms Xu lives up to the apt name of the newly founded gallery. The first exhibition titled "Catastrophic Beauty: Art in the Age of the Anthropocene" curated by Professor Xie takes on an unanticipated angle of discovering beauty in catastrophe. Shang Yang is a leading avant-garde Chinese artist well versed in ink, oil and mixed media. Unlike his contemporaries who took on an idealist or disillusioned or cynical views on modernity in China, Shang Yang takes a less traversed path of bringing awareness to environmental impact of modernity by alluding to ancient ink paintings and socio-political objects. The Decay series exhibited is an extension of his signature Dong QiChang series in which his attenuated criticism towards environmental impact from modern reforms is directed towards the socio-political areana. The beauty lies in his tasteful manner of fusing ancient Chinese ink painting aesthetics and western styles. John Sabraw turned the environmental impact on its head by converting contaminated water into sustainable pigments used in his paintings reminiscent of Chinese ink wash techniques. The East and the West meet at multiple levels. The following solo exhibition highlighting Cate White and Sean Howe shifts gears to younger artists with contemporary styles. Cate White juxtaposes well known paintings with modern scenes of herself, her friends and family. Her stand on her self image, race and women's rights are vociferously displayed. The imaginative and childlike works of Sean Howe contrast the subtle messages on the impact of modernity on who we are and how we live. The most recent solo exhibition centers on foreign born American artists Stella Zhang and Yulia Pinkusevich. Stella Zhang was born into a Chinese artistic family, proficiently trained in traditional Chinese ink paintings since a young age. Her mature art works at times are in contemporary Western style; at times coalesce traditional Chinese aesthetics and philosophy with Western modern and postmodern styles. Her Internal Landscape series is a prime example of the latter. From a distance it resembles traditional ink landscape paintings. Close up one detects suggestions of human spine and nervous system with a vivid sense of qi flowing through - the ancient Chinse concept of energy source in all lives - brought about by heightened tension and release. An exemplary traditional Chinese ink landscape painting takes one to the ultimate state of serene transcendence. Stella Zhang's works are a captivating novel take leading one to an alternate transcendent state of aliveness, tension and release. Yulia Pinkusevich, a Ukrainian artist who lived through Cold War, expressed her intrigue of the dispassionate calculations of the impact of nuclear weapons with their calamitous implications in Isorithm series. The rationalization in the rational calculation of the damage by nuclear weapons is erringly tranquil in her works. There is this sense of dissociation watching chaos unfolding from the ruptures in Isorithm series that is perhaps too familiar to those traumatized by catastrophic events. This brings us back to the first exhibition where catastrophe meets beauty.

    Photos
    Qualia Contemporary Art - Part of Interlaced collection

    Part of Interlaced collection

    Qualia Contemporary Art - Part of Interlaced collection

    Part of Interlaced collection

    Qualia Contemporary Art

    See all

    Anderson Collection At Stanford University - Jackson Pollock's Lucifer

    Anderson Collection At Stanford University

    4.7(37 reviews)
    1.4 mi

    Admission to this museum that features American modern and contemporary art is free!…read more It's pretty sizable with two floors and several interesting pieces. If you're there on a weekend look out for the free pubic in-person tours on Saturdays and Sundays at 12:30pm and 2:30pm. We took one and it was better than wandering around the exhibits ourselves. Worth a stop if you're visiting the Stanford campus.

    Disclaimer: I give any free museum five stars. Well, it will cost you your zip code. I just gave…read morethem 58008, hoping they'd realize later what it spells upside down. This is one of the world's most outstanding private assemblies of postwar American art, gifted by Bay Area collectors Harry W. "Hunk" and Mary Margaret "Moo" Anderson and their daughter Mary Patricia Anderson Pence, who looks more like Moo but acts like Hunk. The museum, which opened in 2014, houses 121 paintings and sculptures and is known for its focus on movements like Abstract Expressionism, Color Field Painting, and Pop Art. The collection is celebrated for featuring canonical works by some of the 20th century's most significant American artists. Key figures and their works include: Jackson Pollock: The monumental drip painting "Lucifer," considered by many to be the outstanding drip painting still in private hands before it was gifted to Stanford. Mark Rothko: The signature color-field work, "Pink and White over Red." Clyfford Still: A large, imposing piece called "1957-J No. 1 (PH-142)." Richard Diebenkorn: Works like "Ocean Park #60," which displays his progression into abstract forms using geometric shapes and a subdued color palette. Other Masters: The collection also includes works by Willem de Kooning, Franz Kline, Philip Guston, Robert Motherwell, and Helen Frankenthaler. The museum building itself is spacious, which means it feels mostly like space. The coolest thing was the meticulous library that felt too nice to even touch. Be sure to see the Cantor Arts Museum next door. Random Notes: One exhibit had a music video by Nick Cave on repeat, which was annoying and a little out of place, echoing throughout the museum. Oddly, it was not the Nick Cave you are thinking off (i.e. Bad Seeds). It was a different Nick Cave. Which is weird. It's like saying "Oh, yeah, no, that painting of the flower over there is actually Georgia O'Queef." 1. One of the collection's anchor pieces, a major painting by Clyfford Still, was acquired a jockey who had won the famous 1950s television quiz show, "The $64,000 Question," and then retired to open an art gallery in San Francisco. 2. Mark Tansey's painting "Yosemite Falls (Homage to Watkins)" (1993), depicts the famous waterfall, but instead of falling water, the cascade is made up of cameras and tripods. I looked into an art textbook to try to interpret it and apparently it means I am gay.

    Photos
    Anderson Collection At Stanford University - Lucifer

    Lucifer

    Anderson Collection At Stanford University
    Anderson Collection At Stanford University

    See all

    Gallery House - galleries - Updated May 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...