
Julia Alcayde y Montoya (1885–1939), was a Spanish painter.

María Blanchard, was a Spanish painter. She was known for developing a unique style of Cubism.

Elena Blasco is a Spanish multidisciplinary artist who works in photography, painting, and installations. With a subjective and ironic view, she recreates everyday objects and settings to build a personal and unique identity into her works, in some cases referring to gender violence and social injustice.

Francisca María Brockmann y Llanos (1867–1946) was a Spanish historical painter.

Purificación "Purita" Campos Sánchez was a Spanish cartoonist, illustrator and painter.

Yolanda Castaño Pereira is a Galician painter, literacy critic and poet.

Sofía Gandarias was a Spanish painter.

Concha Ibáñez Escobar is a contemporary Catalan painter and writer. A landscape artist, she has painted scenes in Catalonia, Castile, Andalusia, the Balearic Islands, the Canary Islands, Venice, Greece, Maghreb, Cuba, New York City. Her illustrations in oil or engraving accompanied the works of the writers Baltasar Porcel, Miquel de Palol, Marta Pessarrodona, Cesareo Rodriguez-Aguilera and Josep Maria Carandell.

Carmen Jiménez Serrano was a Spanish painter, sculptor, and professor.

Ana Juan is a Spanish artist, illustrator and painter.
Maruja Mallo was a Spanish surrealist painter. She’s considered as an artist of the “Generation of 1927” within the Spanish avant-garde movement.

Paloma Navares is an interdisciplinary Spanish artist who combines sculpture, photography, video and audio in her installations. Recurring themes in her work are the feminine condition, the historical representation of women through art, the critical analysis of the canon, madness, beauty and aging.

Marina Núñez is a Spanish artist, and a professor at the University of Vigo.

Liliana Palaia Pérez is an Argentine-born architect and painter who resides and works in Valencia, Spain.

Pepita Pardell Terrade was a Spanish animator, cartoonist, illustrator, and painter. She was a pioneer of animation cinema in Spain. In 1945, she worked on the first animated film, in color, in Europe. Pardell was awarded the Creu de Sant Jordi in 2018.

María Luisa Pérez Herrero was a Spanish painter specializing in landscapes, whose artistic career was cut short by her early death at age 36.

Nuria Quevedo Teixidó is a Spanish painter and graphic artist, affiliated with the Communist Party, who has lived in Berlin since age 15.

Regina Raull was a Spanish painter with residence in Mexico City.

Blanca de los Ríos Nostench was a Spanish writer and painter.

Elena Sorolla García was an early 20th-century Spanish sculptor and painter. She devoted her youth to sculpture, having a brief career that she left behind to dedicate herself to her family after marrying Victoriano Lorente in 1922. Most of her works are part of private collections, with the exception of some that belong to the Sorolla Museum. She was the youngest daughter of painter Joaquín Sorolla and curator Clotilde García del Castillo.

Carmina Useros Cortés was a Spanish writer, ceramist, painter, and cultural manager. A researcher of the gastronomic, artisan, and cultural traditions of Albacete, she was one of the first women gastronomes in Spain.

María Dolors Vázquez Aznar was a Spanish realist painter and lawyer.

Lluïsa Vidal i Puig was a painter. Raised in a well-off family closely related to Catalan modernist circles, she is known as the only professional women painter of Catalan modernism, and one of the few women of that period who went abroad to receive art lessons.
Maria del Rosario Weiss Zorrilla was a Spanish painter and engraver best known for portraits. She was the goddaughter of Francisco de Goya and lived with him during his final years when her mother was his maid. Over seventy of her drawings, preserved at the Hispanic Society of America, were once attributed to Goya but, in 1956, the art historian José López-Rey demonstrated conclusively that they were hers.