
Vilmos Aba-Novák was a Hungarian painter and graphic artist. He was an original representative of modern art in his country, and specifically of its modern monumental painting. He was also the celebrated author of frescoes and church murals at Szeged and Budapest, and was officially patronized by the Hungarian nobility.

Gyula Aggházy was a Hungarian genre painter and art teacher.

Tivadar Cohn Hermann Alconiere was a 19th-century Austro-Hungarian painter. Cohn Hermann was his original family name.
Lili Árkayné Sztehló was a Hungarian painter and artist, wife of Bertalan Árkay, best known for her stained glass window paintings in parish churches and cathedrals throughout Hungary.

Pál Balkay (1785–1846) was a Hungarian painter and teacher best known for his portrait of "The Sister and Brother".

Miklós Barabás was a Hungarian painter. He is mostly known for his portrait paintings, including a famous portrait of a young Franz Liszt done in 1847 and an 1853 portrait of Emperor Franz Joseph I.

Jenő Barcsay was a Hungarian painter.

Andor Basch was a Hungarian painter whose works have been featured in the Hungarian National Gallery.

Árpád Basch was a Hungarian painter and graphic artist.

Gyula Basch, was a Hungarian painter.

Gyula Benczúr was a Hungarian painter and art teacher. He specialized in portraits and historical scenes.

Lujo Bezeredi (Bezeredy) was a Croatian-Hungarian sculptor and painter.

Benjamin Block or Blok (1631–1690) was a seventeenth-century German-Hungarian Baroque painter who married the flower painter Anna Katharina Block. He is known for his portrait paintings.

Károly Brocky, or Charles Brocky was a Hungarian painter.

Lajos Bruck (1846–1910) was a Hungarian painter. During his lifetime, his works were featured in Műcsarnok. He is displayed in the Hungarian National Gallery.

István Csók was a Hungarian Impressionist painter. Csok lived and exhibited in Paris for a portion of his life. He became most famous in Hungary for his nudes, portraits, and landscapes of the Lake Balaton. Csok had many international exhibitions in such cities as Rome, San Francisco, Pittsburgh, and London. He won the Kossuth Prize twice.

Lajos Csordák was a Hungarian painter.

Balázs Diószegi was a Hungarian painter.

Lajos Deák Ébner was a Hungarian painter.

József Egry (1883–1951) was a Hungarian painter, considered a significant representative of Hungarian modernism.

Alajos Györgyi Giergl was a Hungarian painter. He is notable for his portraits and paintings in the Romanticism style.

Lajos Gulácsy was a Hungarian painter with works collected by the Hungarian National Gallery. Heavily influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites, his rather dreamlike work is associated with Art Nouveau and Symbolism, but can also be considered a prelude to Surrealism.

Ferenc Helbing was a Hungarian graphic artist and painter.

János Jankó (1833–1896) was a Hungarian painter, caricaturist and graphicist. He is furthermore notable as one of the earliest Hungarian comics artists.

Jenő Jendrassik was a Hungarian painter whose work is exhibited in the Hungarian National Gallery.

Béla Kádár (1877–1956) was a Hungarian painter influenced by Der Blaue Reiter, Cubism, Futurism, Neo-Primitivism, Constructivism, and Metaphysical painting.

Isidor Kaufmann was an Austro-Hungarian painter of Jewish themes. Having devoted his career to genre painting, he traveled throughout Eastern Europe in search of scenes of Jewish, often Hasidic life.

Béla Kondor was a Hungarian painter, prose writer, poet, photographer, and avant-garde graphic artist.

György Kornis was a Hungarian painter. He studied in École des Beaux-Arts. His artistic style is Abstract Surrealism, and influenced by Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso. From 1980 to 1990 he lived in Vienna and now he lives in Budapest. At a very young age, he was a Paris Opera stage designer.

Tihamér Margitay (1859–1922) was a Hungarian painter. He was born in Jenke, Austria-Hungary,. He painted anecdotic, so-called "parlour pictures", in the style of Jules Bastien-Lepage.

Eszter Mattioni was a prominent twentieth century Hungarian painter.

József Molnár was a Hungarian painter.

Soma Orlai Petrich, aka Soma Orlay Petrich was a Hungarian painter, born to a Serbian father and Hungarian mother.

Karoly Patko was a twentieth century Hungarian painter and copper engraver, noted for his nude paintings in a plastic presentation.

Géza Peske (1859–1934) was a Hungarian painter.

Ferdinand Piatnik was an Austrian-Hungarian card painter, manufacturer, business magnate, philanthropist and the founder of Piatnik & Söhne.

Albert Schickedanz was an Austro-Hungarian architect and painter in the Eclectic style.

Margit Sebők was a Hungarian painter and educator.

Béla Spányi was a Hungarian painter who specialized in landscapes.

István Szőnyi (1894-1960) was a Hungarian painter noted for works such as The Bend of the Danube and Zebegény. He and his family rescued Jews during the Holocaust. Hence they were declared Righteous Among the Nations on October 2, 1984. István Szőnyi was one of the most gifted members of the Nagybánya group.

Mór Than was a Hungarian painter.

Dezső Váli is a Hungarian painter.