Create

Connect

Activate

Liberate

Create ❃ Connect ❃ Activate ❃ Liberate ❃

More than just a gallery

A community-rooted space where art is resistance, connection, and change.

JustArts Gallery, based in Tulsa, works in partnership with artists confined to carceral institutions across the country—representing their work and co-creating exhibitions and programs that amplify their voices. Artists who exhibit at JustArts receive all income from sales unless they independently decide to contribute a portion to support the Gallery. In addition to showing and selling their work, JustArts assists the artists we proudly represent in identifying other avenues for sharing their artwork and stories, always prioritizing their sense of agency, dignity, and worth when forging connections. By collaborating with, centering, and celebrating these exceptionally talented and driven artists we embrace active resistance, healing, and a pathway to human connection.

JustArts Gallery is a space for liberatory ideas and honors the vital role art plays in imagining and building a just and loving world where everyone has what they need to thrive.

Experience it in person.

 

320 S. Trenton Ave.
Tulsa, OK 74120

Hours
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

justarts4all@gmail.com



1 - 6 pm
12 - 6 pm
12 - 8 pm
12 - 8 pm
12 - 6 pm

Colorful drawing of a pasture scene with three large leafless trees, a yellow sun, Birds, and a variety of colored bison grazing on grass, with a green field and blue sky in the background.

A Rainbow of Buffalo, Spoon Jackson

Land Acknowledgement

JustArts is located on the reservation of the Mvskoke (Muscogee [Creek]) Nation, whose Tribal members were forcibly removed from their homelands due to discriminatory policies including the U.S. Indian Removal Act of 1830. JustArts honors the enduring presence, sovereignty, and contributions of the Indigenous peoples who have stewarded the land and water now known as Tulsa, Oklahoma for generations. This includes the Ni-u-kon-ska (Osage), Kitikiti’sh (Wichita), Kadohadacho (Caddo), Mvskoke (Muscogee [Creek]), and Tsálăgĭ (Cherokee) Tribal Nations.