
Vytautas Pranas Bičiūnas was a Lithuanian painter, theatre actor, writer and literary critic.

Arbit Blatas (1908–1999), born Nicolai Arbitblatas, was an artist and sculptor of Lithuanian–Jewish descent.

Bernardas Bučas (1903–1979) was a Lithuanian painter, sculptor, graphicer. Amongst his works are the statue Agriculture on the Green Bridge in Vilnius.

Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis was a Lithuanian painter, composer and writer.

Feliksas Daukantas was a Lithuanian painter, designer, pioneer of design specialty in Lithuania.

Vladimiras Dubeneckis was a Lithuanian architect and painter.

Olga Dubeneckienė (1891–1967) was a Lithuanian and Soviet painter.

Adomas Galdikas

José Gurvich was a Uruguayan painter, potter, musician and a key figure in the Constructivism Art movement.

Petras Kalpokas was a Lithuanian artist and professor.

Juozas Kamarauskas (1874–1946) was a Lithuanian painter.

Lazar Krestin was an artist famous in the German art world for Judaic genre scenes and his many sober portraits of Eastern European Jews. He was also a noted Zionist.

Arno Nadel was a Jewish musicologist, composer, playwright, poet, and painter.

Yehuda Pen, also known as Yuri Pen, was a Lithuanian Jewish painter and art teacher. He was a major figure of the Jewish Renaissance in Russian and Belarusian art at the beginning of 20th century. Pen's most famous student in Vitebsk was the great Jewish painter Marc Chagall.

Lasar Segall was a Lithuanian Jewish and Brazilian painter, engraver and sculptor. Segall's work is derived from impressionism, expressionism and modernism. His most significant themes were depictions of human suffering, war, persecution and prostitution.

Kazys Šimonis was a famous Lithuanian painter.

Algis Skačkauskas was a Lithuanian painter. He studied painting at the State Art Institute of Lithuania from 1977 to 1983. After graduation, he worked as a teacher. Skačkauskas held over 20 personal exhibitions. His works are subtle, colorful, often featuring women, people working land, domestic animals.

Aloyzas Smilingis is a Lithuanian sculptor and painter. He is known for his large, monumental bronze and stone sculptures as well as abstract paintings. His artistic ideas often clashed with Soviet ideology, and his sculptures that decorate numerous cities in Lithuania. He lives and works near Vilnius, Lithuania.

Vytautas Tomaševičius is a Lithuanian painter, creating work in Vilnius since the late 1990s. His distinctive style combines a graphite and painted image with an enlarged laser-printed graphic transferred to the painting surface. In 2019 he became the first Lithuanian artist to win the Excellence Award in the Tokyo Art Olympia Biennale.

Ber Zalkind (1878-1944) was a Lithuanian Jewish painter. He studied in Paris, France and was a member of the Artists' Association of Vilna from 1909.

Antanas Žmuidzinavičius was a Lithuanian painter and art collector. Sometimes he used Antanas Žemaitis as his pen name.

Czeslaw Znamierowski was a renowned Soviet Lithuanian painter, known for his large artworks and love of nature. Znamierowski combined these two passions to create some of the most notable paintings in the Soviet Union, earning a prestigious title of "Honorable Artist of LSSR" in 1965.

William Zorach was a Lithuanian-born American sculptor, painter, printmaker, and writer. He won the Logan Medal of the arts. He is notable for being at the forefront of American Artists embracing cubism, as well as for his sculpture.