Tulsa Antiques

Tulsa Antiques SORRY, BUT WE ARE PERMANENTLY CLOSED. If you have a question about an item on this page, or selling or consigning
please contact our store directly.

Phone 918.935.3355. 19th Century Glass & Porcelain, Sculpture, Fine Art, Decorative Accessories & Fine Consignments

Here is another case piece that needs to find a new home - this diminutive, French style vitrine has adjustable shelves,...
07/24/2025

Here is another case piece that needs to find a new home - this diminutive, French style vitrine has adjustable shelves, a mirrored back, and glass on three sides. 62.5 inches tallest x 22 inches wide x 13 inches deep. It's a bargain at $299

As we pack up the store we have a few furniture pieces that are still looking for a new, good home. American Oak China C...
07/24/2025

As we pack up the store we have a few furniture pieces that are still looking for a new, good home.

American Oak China Cabinet, 69inches tall x 48 inches wide x 16.5 inches deep. $300

Rosewood chest with 3 drawers and secret drawer, 36 inches tall x 48 inches wide x 22 inches deep. $400

07/17/2025

As many already know, Tulsa Antiques has closed. We are so grateful for our consignors who have trusted us to find new homes for their treasures. And we are grateful for our customers who have faithfully supported us over the last 15 years. You have all been such a blessing and it has been my sincere pleasure to have served you. I will miss seeing your sweet faces and hearing about your family, interests and adventures. Truly, my soul been enriched by knowing you and calling you friend. With much love and gratitude, Marcia

Looking for a focal point of your contemporary or mid-century room and you’d really prefer something unique and not mass...
05/21/2025

Looking for a focal point of your contemporary or mid-century room and you’d really prefer something unique and not mass produced? This is a custom coffee table by renown sculptor Silas Seandel who produces bespoke, one-of-a-kind pieces for architects and designers. His commissions include the World Trade Center Memorial, Forbes, AT&T, ABC Television, Georgia Institute of Technology and many more prestigious clients. These sculptured furniture masterpieces are executed in solid metals using no enamels or veneers - instead, a process that Seandel developed using acids and heat treatments. The heavy (and we do mean heavy) glass top measures 36 in. x 72 in. and the table is 15.5 inches tall. Because of our display area and lighting challenges this was impossible to photograph adequately, so come see it at Tulsa Antiques, 4305 E 31st St., Tulsa, OK. 12p-5p, Tues-Saturday

05/03/2025

A rare find to quicken the hearts of Francophiles – this Maison Foulon Fils French Art Deco mail box serviced the Chateau-Thierry commune situated in the historic Province of Champagne. If you were lucky enough to add it to your collection you could enjoy its French charm every day. See it soon before it finds a new home. Tulsa Antiques LLC, 4305 E 31st Street, Tuesday through Saturday 12p -5p. 918.935.3355

If you have a question about an item on this page, or selling or consigning
please contact our store directly. We are open Tues - Friday 12-6, Sat 12-5, Phone 918.935.3355.

Just one of the great consignments you’ll find at the store is this exemplary antique, 19” tall Royal Dux Bohemia cerami...
02/27/2025

Just one of the great consignments you’ll find at the store is this exemplary antique, 19” tall Royal Dux Bohemia ceramic figure. The Art Nouveau bathing beauty is seated on a rocky outcrop drying her feet. Notice her “bathhouse dress” that laces at each side. This style of bathing tog was at the height of European fashion just before 1900. Similar examples can be traced through art produced during that time throughout central Europe, and especially Bohemia. It carries the distinctive, factory applied, triangular “bubble gum” mark. In pieces produced before World War I, the triangle was left unglazed (as is this one). The mark’s center has an impressed “E” for its founder Eduard Eichler and further confirms its production during the first period of 1860 to WWI. It is collection worthy, and we know it will find a new home soon. We hope you’ll make time to see it before it is gone.

A new consignment at our store – a Model by J.J. Kaendler for Meissen, circa 1741 The cautionary tale of Count Bruhl’s t...
10/09/2024

A new consignment at our store – a Model by J.J. Kaendler for Meissen, circa 1741

The cautionary tale of Count Bruhl’s tailor (riding a goat) is a myth that has been repeated for centuries. Based on social hierarchy of the 18th century German royal court, the tale goes that the King’s Chief Minister, Count Bruhl was a dandy who owned hundreds of suits of clothes. And all were made by his highly skilled taylor.
Naturally, the Count’s taylor was of great importance to him, but when the tailor over-stepped his place by requesting an invitation to dine at the Royal Court (which was dominated by nobility), the preposterous request was ridiculed as it would have been a breach of social mores. As a satirical response Kaendler created the model of the taylor on a goat so it could be displayed on Count’s table. This famous piece was produced twice by J.J. Kaendler, first as a 17 inch tall model, and later a smaller 5” version with a female figure.

8th century Mesopotamian Assyrians were the first to develop a technique of applying a tin oxide glaze to earthenware - ...
06/29/2024

8th century Mesopotamian Assyrians were the first to develop a technique of applying a tin oxide glaze to earthenware - eventually becoming the pottery we know today as Majolica.

But it would be 7 centuries later (after Persian and Egyptian iterations were imported to Spain) that Spanish Moors would further adapt the technique and begin exporting from the Mediterranean island of Majorca. The Valencian trade ships laden with tin glazed wares were eagerly received by the Italians and it was these goods that would serve as impetus for Italy’s 800-year ceramic tradition of Majolica.

By 1850 Majolica had become immensely popular with the Victorian affluent and production spread throughout Europe - and to America by the time of the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition.

This impressive Majolica centerpiece is about 14 inches tall and likely produced in 19th century France. It’s lovely, and we hope you have a chance to see it at Tulsa Antiques LLC before it finds a new home. 4305 E 31st St. Tulsa, OK.

New at Tulsa Antiques LLC is this wonderful n**e by American painter and muralist Bettina Steinke (June 25, 1913 – July ...
05/09/2024

New at Tulsa Antiques LLC is this wonderful n**e by American painter and muralist Bettina Steinke (June 25, 1913 – July 11, 1999).

A recipient of the John Singer Sargent Award for Lifetime Achievement, Steinke’s works, (such as the portrait of Will Rogers) remain part of the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum’s permanent collection. She received the Prix de West in 1978 for her painting, Father and Daughter at Crow Fair, and Her commissioned work includes notable people such as Dwight D. Eisenhower, Lady Bird Johnson, Joel McCrea, Francis Dee McCrea, Amanda Blake, Barbara Stanwyck and Acee Blue Eagle.

It’s a treasure and you will find and many more at Tulsa Antiques LLC, 4305 E 31st St, Tulsa, OK 918.935.3355

Just in – and it’s a beauty!   An Art Deco Period uranium/vaseline glass standing fishbowl with pendant light.  The 15 i...
03/13/2024

Just in – and it’s a beauty! An Art Deco Period uranium/vaseline glass standing fishbowl with pendant light. The 15 inch fishbowl is suspended within a twisted and foliate wrought iron cradle supported by a wrought iron and brass stand, terminating in a gothic style base with slipper feet. This treasure may find a new home soon – so don’t wait too long before you come to see it at Tulsa Antiques, 4305 E 31st Street. 12-5 Tuesday through Saturday.

What a joy it was to visit today with 92 year old Ozark wood carver, George Wright.  After retiring early from the insur...
01/10/2024

What a joy it was to visit today with 92 year old Ozark wood carver, George Wright. After retiring early from the insurance industry, George gained experience working in his taxidermy business, but within about five years he set off in a new direction - fish carving. George said he enjoyed having more control over the finished product because in taxidermy, the animal subject was the customer's - but with wood carving, the animal belonged to him alone. Each of his true-to-life carvings are displayed in a naturalistic habitat using stones, pebbles and tree branches that he sourced from Ozark streams, rivers and lakes. If you love to fish, or are simply one who loves nature, George Wright's carvings will amaze and delight you. We hope you can see them in person before they all find new homes.

Address

4305 E. 31st Street
Tulsa, OK
74135

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