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Taxidermy For Sale
Period: 19th Century
Period: Early 1900s
Three Chamois Antler Mount Trophy on Black Forest Carved Wood Plaque Austria
Located in Nuernberg, DE
A set of three antique Austrian Alps Chamois antler trophies on hand carved, Black Forest wooden plaques. I think they are from the 1890s or older. Tallest is approximate 10" high, 6...
Category

1890s Austrian Folk Art Antique Taxidermy

Materials

Antler, Wood

Antler Gun Rack
Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID
Antler mounted gun rack; ca. 1900; floor standing. Entwined antler columns supporting an oak butt rest and barrel clamps for four rifles or shotguns; 53"H x 3...
Category

Early 19th Century Austrian Antique Taxidermy

Materials

Antler

19th Century Fossilised Vertebrae Vernacular Foot Stool Taxidermy
Located in Lowestoft, GB
A highly unusual primitive foot stool, constructed from a fossilised vertebrae with peg jointed chamfered legs. The vertebrae is possibly from a whale, due to its size and the wood...
Category

19th Century British Antique Taxidermy

Materials

Natural Fiber, Wood

Lifesize Papier Mâché Model of a Prized Steer
Located in London, GB
Mounted with a pair of 30 inch horns.
Category

19th Century British Antique Taxidermy

Materials

Horn, Papier Mâché

Small Antique Display Dome, English, Glass, Beech, Showcase, Edwardian, C.1910
Located in Hele, Devon, GB
This is a small antique display dome. An English, taxidermy or ornament showcase in glass and beech, dating to the Edwardian period, circa 1910. A delightfully petite and charming pi...
Category

Early 1900s British Edwardian Antique Taxidermy

Materials

Glass, Beech

Decorating with Antique, New and Vintage Taxidermy

The centuries-old practice of taxidermy continues to enjoy remarkable longevity, with today's top designers making mounted and preserved animals key elements of their decor.

Taxidermy captures animals in an eternal moment of animation, so perhaps it’s fitting that the deployment of these preternaturally preserved creatures — and other natural specimens — as decorative accents has endured far longer than the sell-by-date for most design trends. Certainly, the style-setting enthusiasts of tasteful decorating with taxidermy are as passionate as they are many.

Martha Stewart is a lifelong lover of the preservationist’s art, and she has proudly posed with the vintage game birds, foxes and bears that adorn Skylands, her 1920s retreat in Seal Harbor, Maine. Angelina Jolie began an avian menagerie when her daughter Shiloh brought home a dead bird she wanted to keep as a pet. Danielle Steel has an elegant Paris residence packed with exotic specimens, including a giraffe in the foyer. Over-the-top taxidermy remains the flashy signature of party planner and decorator extraordinaire Ken Fulk.

For Chicago decorator Summer Thornton, the reason for taxidermy’s persistent appeal is obvious: “There’s nothing more beautiful than natural creation.” New York designer Ryan Korban agrees: “They add a layer of whimsy to a room that no other decorative arts element can give.” Patrick Mele, another New York designer, thinks there’s a spiritual component to this attraction. These creatures, he says, “are a special gift to be around. Birds, especially, are so colorful they look hyper-real. They remind us that those crazy colors are right there in nature.”

In the vast inventory of collectibles and curiosities on 1stDibs, find antique, new and vintage preserved and mounted taxidermy specimens for your Wunderkammern, mantle or carefully curated home library.

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