
Ioannis Altamouras was an outstanding Greek painter of the 19th century famous for his paintings of seascapes.

Eleni Boukoura-Altamoura (1821-1900), also known as Eleni Boukouras or Helen Boukoura, was a Greek artist of Arvanite descent. She is noted as being the first great female painter of post-independence Greece.

Georgios Chatzopoulos (1859-1935) was a Greek painter affiliated with the Munich School of Athens.

Iosifina Dimas-Ziller was a Greek painter of German descent.

Ioannis Doukas or Dukas was a Greek painter and one of the main representatives in 19th century portrait painting in Greece.

Nikolaos (Nikos) Dragoumis was a Greek painter and the firstborn son of Stephanos Dragoumis and Elizabeth Kontogiannakis. He has been described by Dimitris Pikionis as "the van Gogh of Greece" because he was an exceptional post-Impressionist, and one of the forerunners of Post-Impressionism in Greece.

Kleoniki Gennadiou was a Greek painter and sculptor.
Angelos Giallinas was a Greek landscape painter, known primarily for his watercolors. He was one of the last representatives of the Heptanese School of art.

Nikolaos Gyzis was considered one of Greece's most important 19th-century painters. He was most famous for his work Eros and the Painter, his first genre painting. It was auctioned in May 2006 at Bonhams in London, being last exhibited in Greece in 1928. He was the major representative of the so-called "Munich School", the major 19th-century Greek art movement.

Georgios Jakobides was a painter and one of the main representatives of the Greek artistic movement of the Munich School. He founded and was the first curator of the National Gallery of Greece in Athens.

One of the newest contemporary saints of the Eastern Orthodox church, Saint Savvas of Kalymnos is the patron saint of the Greek island of Kalymnos, where he lived during the last twenty years of his life as the priest and spiritual father of the nuns of the Convent of All Saints. He was a great ascetic, confessor, icon painter, and miracle-worker. He is one of the recently recognized saints in the Greek Orthodox Church.

Konstantin Kapıdağlı, born Konstantinos Kyzikinos, was a Greek–Ottoman court painter from the late 18th century to the early 19th century. Most of his works were created around 1789–1806.

Nikolaos Koutouzis was a Greek painter, poet and priest who belonged to the Heptanese School of painting.

Andreas Kriezis was a Greek painter with Arvanite origin; primarily of portraits and maritime subjects. His surname is translated from Albanian, it means "black head".
Emmanouil Lampakis was a Greek painter, a member of the academic Munich School of the 19th century.

Polychronis Lembesis, was a Greek painter, a member of the Munich School of Greek artists.

Nikiforos Lytras was a nineteenth-century Greek painter. He was born in Tinos, and trained in Athens at the School of Arts. In 1860 he won a scholarship to Royal Academy of Fine Arts of Munich. After completing these studies, he became a professor at the School of Arts in 1866, a position he held for the rest of his life. He remained faithful to the precepts and principles of the Munich School, while paying greatest attention both to ethographic themes and portraiture. His most famous portrait was of the royal couple, Otto and Amalia, and his most well-known landscape a depiction of the region of Lavrio.
Ioannis Oikonomou was a Greek painter, xylographer, engraver and amateur athlete.

Charalambos Pachis was a Greek painter of the Heptanese school who specialized in landscapes and historical scenes.

Périclès Pantazis was a major Greek impressionist painter of the 19th century who gained a great reputation as an artist initially in Belgium.
Alexander Philadelpheus was a distinguished Greek archaeologist, historian, painter, writer and philosopher.

Ioannis Poulakas, the Greek painter and scenographer, was born on January 1, 1863, in Agios Georgios Nileias in the periphery of Volos and died, 79 years old, in Athens on February 21, 1942. Poulakas was professionally concerned primarily with scenography and secondarily with painting.

Spyridon Prosalentis was a Greek portrait painter of the Heptanese School. His first name is sometimes seen as Spyros.

Iakovos Rizos or Iacovos Rizos, also known as Jacques Rizo, was a Greek painter who worked primarily in Paris.

Georgios Roilos was one of the most important and influential Greek painters of the late 19th-early 20th century. He belonged to the so-called "Munich School". His major works include historical topics, portraits, and scenes of everyday life. One of his most famous paintings is “The Poets”, which depicts some of the most important representatives of the New Athenian school of poetry, also known as the Generation of 1880.
Periklis Tsirigotis was a Greek Orientalist painter.

Dionysios Tsokos was a Greek painter; one of the first to gain recognition in the post-Ottoman period. He is mostly known for portraits and historical scenes which combine elements from the Heptanese School with Italian styles.
Nikolaos Vokos was a Greek painter of the Munich School art movement.
Konstantinos Volanakis was a Greek painter who became known as the "father of Greek seascape painting".

Theodoros Vryzakis was a Greek painter, known mostly for his historical scenes. He was one of the founders of the "Munich School", composed of Greek artists who had studied in that city.

Nikolaos Xydias Typaldos was a Greek painter, best known for his portraits. He worked mostly in the Academic style.