Bryan Memorial Gallery
Bryan Memorial Gallery

About Bryan Memorial Gallery

The Bryan Gallery
180 Main Street
Jeffersonville, VT 05454


2025 Jeffersonville Gallery Hours: 
January 1 to March 4: Closed (Winter Break)
March 5 to June 1: Wed - Sun, 11am – 4pm
June 4 to October 26: Wednesday - Sunday, 11am - 5pm
October 29 to December 28: Wednesday - Sunday, 11am - 4pm

Or by appointment by emailing info@bryangallery.org or by calling (802) 644-5100


The Bryan Fine Art Gallery
64 South Main Street
Stowe, VT 05672


Stowe Gallery Hours:
Wednesday - Sunday 11 - 5
Or by appointment by emailing info@bryangallery.org or by calling (802) 760-6474


Jeffersonville Administrative Hours: Mon – Fri


USPS Mailing Address:
The Bryan Gallery
P.O. Box 340
Jeffersonville, VT 05464

About the Gallery

Founded by artist Alden Bryan in memory of his wife, painter Mary Bryan, the Bryan Gallery showcases the works of several hundred regional-based artists in rotating exhibits throughout the season. Gallery artists paint unique perspectives of the breathtaking views that make up the Northern Vermont region. All artwork is for sale! Collectors and art enthusiasts are always welcome to visit, browse and discuss the work on display.

The Bryan Gallery is located on Main Street in Jeffersonville, Vermont, a small, village named for Thomas Jefferson. Perched at the base of Smuggler’s Notch Resort, Jeffersonville is a picturesque, 20-minute drive from Stowe, Vermont [home to our sister Gallery, Stowe Fine Arts], via the dramatic, winding Notch Road.

Boasting a robust painting history, this region has inspired painters for well over 100 years. Esteemed artists such as Thomas Curtin, Charles Curtis Allen and Emile Gruppe have all painted here, enchanted with the views in any season. Generations of painters continue to flock to the area to paint the views that don’t seem to change with the passage of time.

The land on which the Gallery was built has served as a site of meeting and exchange among the region’s Indigenous population since time immemorial. The Western Abenaki [A-ben-A-kee] are the traditional caretakers of our Vermont lands and waters, called Ndakinna [in-DAH-kee-NAH], or “homeland.” We honor their connection to this region and are thankful for the opportunity steward and protect their homeland.