
Azer Seyran oghlu Aliyev is the Azerbaijani painter, graphic artist and designer. Associate Professor of Azerbaijan State Academy of Fine Arts.

Peeter Allik was an Estonian artist and Surrealist.

Julie Apap was a Maltese ceramicist based in Msida, Malta. Throughout her career, she exhibited in Malta, USA, Egypt and Croatia. She studied ceramics in England and Malta and later taught the subject at a secondary school and at her own studio, The Pot Studio in Msida, Malta. The studio was a hub for a number of female Malta-based ceramicists during the 2000s.

William "Willie" Apap was a Maltese artist. He was born in Valletta, Malta, on 26 June 1918. He was the youngest member of a family that included the sculptor Vincent Apap and musician Joseph Apap.

Joannis Avramidis was a contemporary Greek-Austrian sculptor. He was born in Batumi, Soviet Union to a family of Pontic Greeks.

Jānis Backāns was a Latvian and Latgalian ceramicist.

Artūras Barysas "Baras" was a Lithuanian actor, singer, photographer, and filmmaker, known as a member of the counter-culture and the father of modern Lithuanian avant-garde.

Adriaan van der Burg (1693–1733) was an 18th-century painter from the Northern Netherlands.

Gabriel Caruana was a Maltese artist who worked primarily in ceramics. He studied at the Malta School of Art (1953–59), the Accademia Pietro Vannucci in Perugia (1965), the School of the Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts (1966) and the Istituto Statale per la Ceramica in Faenza (1967).

Charles Catteau was a French Art Déco industrial designer.
Rimantas Dichavičius is a Lithuanian photographer.

Ger van Elk was a Dutch artist who created sculptures, painted photographs, installations and film. His work has been described as being both conceptual art and arte povera. Between 1959 and 1988 he lived and worked in Los Angeles, New York City, and Amsterdam, except for a period of study in Groningen in the 1960s. In 1996 he won the J. C. van Lanschot Prize for Sculpture.

Irakli Gamrekeli(Georgian: ირაკლი გამრეკელი; 5 May 1894 – 10 May 1943) was a Georgian set designer and one of the founders of Georgian avant-garde stage design.

Ramón Gaya y Pomés was a Spanish painter and writer.

Rebekka Guðleifsdóttir is a photographer from Iceland who was named the "Web's Top Photographer" by the Wall Street Journal on 29 July 2006.

Menachem Gueffen was an Israeli painter.

Jean Lucien Nicolas Jacoby was a Luxembourg artist. He won Olympic gold medals in the Olympic art competitions of 1924 and 1928, making him the most successful Olympic artist ever. Jacoby often depicted sports in his works, also designing Luxembourg postage stamps for the 1952 Summer Olympics.

Raivo Järvi, commonly known under the pseudonym of Onu Raivo was an Estonian artist, radio personality and politician.

Gabrijel Jurkić was a Bosnian artist.

Eugène de Kermadec was a French painter.

Mikuláš Klimčák was a Slovak iconographer, artist and philosopher.

Atilla Kuzu is a Turkish interior designer and furniture designer.

Jānis Limans was a Latvian and Latgalian ceramicist.

Ana Marija Marović (1815–1887) was a Serbian writer and painter in Italy and Montenegro. She knew the Italian and Serbian languages.

Salih Memecan is a Turkish editorial caricaturist and cartoonist. Memecan's political cartoon strip, Bizimcity, and comics cartoon strip, Sizinkiler, are published daily in Sabah newspaper, one of the largest in Turkey, and weekly in the Aktüel magazine. The New York Times, The Washington Post, the San Francisco Chronicle, The Baltimore Sun and The Philadelphia Inquirer have published Memecan's editorial cartoons.

Iakob Nikoladze was a Georgian sculptor and artist.

Daniel Ozmo was a Bosnian Jewish painter and printmaker. He studied in Belgrade, where he became a member of the communist progressive youth movement.

Anker Eli Petersen is a Faroese writer and artist.

Aleksandr Konstantinovich Shervashidze (Chachba) was a painter from the Russian Empire and member of the Shervashidze princely dynasty of Abkhazia. He was the grandson of the Abkhazian ruler Sefer Ali-Bey. His father Constantine was part of the 1832 conspiracy of Georgian nobility against Russian rule. Following the death of his cousin, Giorgi Shervashidze in 1918, Alexander was the locum tenens of the Abkhazian throne.

Kiril Shivarov was a Bulgarian artist. His work was part of the art competition at the 1932 Summer Olympics.

Valerian Sidamon-Eristavi was a Georgian Modernist artist and set designer.

Mihail Simeonov is a Bulgarian artist living who lived in New York prior to 2005.

Siyâvash, Siyavush, or Siyavush Beg was an Iranian illustrator of Georgian origin known for his miniatures with dramatic landscape elements and well-organized compositions. He was active at the court of the Safavid shahs of Iran.
Diamantis Stagidis is a contemporary artist; primarily a painter in oils. He lives in Kavala. Although his artwork is appeared abstract, nothing is random, except the wet colour, the lines dances composing abstract figures reminding the viewers familiar scenes moving at the edge between the remembrance and oblivion. Therefore, the real meaning of the art is what cannot be said, the ineffability. The new movement of neo-renaissancian abstract art begins.

Jean-Pierre Sudre was a commercial photographer.

Vincas Svirskis was the most prominent Lithuanian folk sculptor and wood carver, known for his works in Lithuanian cross crafting, god-carving and roofed pole carving.

The denomination Upper Rhenish Master refers to an artist active ca. 1410–20 possibly in Strasbourg. The most famous painting of the artist is Paradiesgärtlein, a mixed-technique painting on oakwood, 26.3 x 33.4 cm, now in the Städel Museum. The painting is the Städel's most famous example of the old German school.

Jean Zaleski was a Maltese artist who spent most of her adult life in the United States. Her work has appeared in several exhibitions in the United States and Malta.

Stanislovas Žvirgždas is a Lithuanian photographer, particularly of landscapes.