
Mary Cecil Allen was an Australian artist, writer and lecturer. She lived most of her adult life in America, where she was known as Cecil Allen. Allen initially painted landscapes and portraits in her early career, but changed to modernist styles including cubism from the 1930s. In 1927 Allen lectured at New York City venues including the Metropolitan Museum, Columbia University and other institutions. She was sponsored by the Carnegie Corporation. Allen wrote two books of art criticism, The Mirror of the Passing World (1928) and Painters of the Modern Mind (1929), based on her lectures.

Jean Appleton was an Australian painter, art teacher and printmaker. She worked with oils, watercolour, charcoal, pastel, pencil and India ink. The second of three children and an only daughter, Appleton did a five-year diploma course in drawing and illustration at the East Sydney Technical College.

Julian Rossi Ashton was an English-born Australian artist and teacher. He is best known for founding the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney and encouraging Australian painters to capture local life and scenery en plein air, greatly influencing the impressionist Heidelberg School movement.

Edmund Henry "Harry" Baggs was a South Australian art teacher and painter, mostly of landscapes in oils, c. 1890–1920.

John Chester Cato was an Australian photographer and teacher. Cato started his career as a commercial photographer and later moved towards fine art photography and education. Cato spent most of his life in Melbourne, Australia.

Dr Daniel Connell is an Australian artist and arts educator. He is known for portraiture and was selected for the Australia Council's Arts Leadership Program in 2020.

Paulus Henrique Benedictus Cox, known as Paul Cox, was a Dutch-Australian filmmaker who has been recognized as "Australia's most prolific film auteur".

David Friedrich Dallwitz was a South Australian jazz and classical musician, bandleader, composer, painter, and art teacher whose work spanned almost seven decades. He led jazz, Dixieland, and ragtime bands, and performed with classical chamber music groups.

Lindsay Bernard Hall was an English-born Australian artist, teacher and art gallery director.

Charles Hill was an engraver, painter and arts educator in South Australia.

Richard Ernest Minchin, generally known as R. E. Minchin, was a zoo administrator and artist in South Australia.

Lenton Parr was an Australian sculptor and teacher.

Alethea Mary Proctor was an Australian painter, print maker, designer and teacher who upheld the ideas of 'taste' and 'style'.

John Skinner Prout (1805–1876) was a British painter, writer, lithographer and art teacher who worked in Australia in the 1840s.

Antonio Salvatore Dattilo Rubbo was an Italian-born artist and art teacher active in Australia from 1897.

Howard Taylor AM was a painter, potter, graphic artist and teacher of art in Perth, Western Australia.

Marie Anne Tuck, was an artist and art educator in South Australia.

Ruth Edith Tuck was a modernist painter of South Australia, noted for joint exhibitions with her husband Mervyn Ashmore Smith, and her influence as a teacher of painting. She was related to the better-known Marie Tuck.