Pinchas Litvinovsky (Hebrew: פנחס ליטבינובסקי; August 11, 1894 – September 15, 1985), was an Israeli painter.
Litvinovsky immigrated to Mandate Palestine in 1919 with the first wave of settlers of the Third Aliyah, on board the SS.
[1] In the 1930s, Litvinovsky traveled to Paris several times where he encountered the art of Georges Roux, Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso Joan Miró, and the painters of the School of Paris.
In the early 1950s, Litvinovsky settled down in the Katamon neighbourhood of Jerusalem, In the house that Moshe Dayan gave him.
Curator Amichai Chasson describes these works as an attempt "to merge the lofty spiritual element with the mundane".