Ray Bartkus (born 1961, in Vilnius) is a Lithuanian-American artist. His work spans numerous mediums, including illustrations, hyperrealist paintings, and large-scale installations. He is known as the founder of MaLonNY, an annual art festival in MarijampolÃÂ, and as the designer of the Lithuanian 50 Litas bill. His works have been acquired by the National Portrait Gallery, the , the MO Museum, and the Noewe Foundation.
In 1991, shortly after emigrating to New York City, Bartkus began working as an illustrator for numerous publications, including The New York Times Book Review, Harper's Magazine, the Wall Street Journal and Time magazine. Former New York Times Art Director Steven Heller described Bartkusâ illustrations as combining elements of both realism and surrealism, while also noting Bartkusâ ability to constantly shift styles. Bartkus ascribed his creative flexibility to growing up amid the âÂÂsingle-mindedness of a communist state,â which led him to prize the freedom offered by multiple perspectives. His illustrations have received numerous awards from the Society of Publication Designers, the Society of Newspaper Designers, and the Society of Illustrators.
In 2014, Bartkus launched MaLonNY (which stands for MarijampolÃÂ, London, and New York), an ongoing street art and music festival and creative symposium held annually in the Lithuanian city of MarijampolÃÂ. Over ten years, MaLonNY has turned Marijampolàinto a center for Lithuanian street art, with contributions from international and Lithuanian artists such as Judy Tuwaletstiwa, à ½ilvinas Kempinas, Stasys EidrigeviÃÂius, Mike Estabrook, The Bubble Process, Lou Beach, Ieva MartinaitytÃÂ-Mediodia, Oleksandr Shatokhin, Philip Grisewood, Kacper Dolatowski, and others. MaLonNY has also featured musical performances by Electric Djinn, Daddy Was A Milkman, and Fast Forward, among others. One of Bartkusâ murals for the event, âÂÂFloating World,â has been widely shared online because of how it was painted to reflect in the river below it.
Bartkus has established himself as a hyperrealist painter. One of his series, âÂÂLast Paintings,â engaged in a dialogue with the works of Pre-Raphaelite painters, attempting to produce a more contemporary art by returning to earlier artistic principles. Another of his series, âÂÂForgeries,â reproduced official documents from Bartkusâ life with humorous and meta-artistic touches. These works have been exhibited in the US, Lithuania, Poland, Austria, Japan, and the Netherlands, and have been selected to represent Lithuania in a 2025 exhibition on hyperrealist art organized by HypâÂÂArt in France.
Bartkus began creating large-scale public installations in 2014, when he created a work titled âÂÂLanding Stripâ to inaugurate the annual meeting of the World Lithuanian Youth Association. Over the next three four years, his installations were featured at the United Nations building in New York City, the International Peace Institute Salzburg Forum, and Union Station in Washington, D.C. One of Bartkusâ installations, titled âÂÂGardens,â was commissioned by the Lithuanian Embassy to commemorate 100 years of Lithuania's independence. The design of this piece was based on traditional Lithuanian straw mobile folk art. It was exhibited in several cities across the United States, including Washington D.C., Chicago, Philadelphia, and New York City, and later was shown at the in Vilnius and the Samogitian Art Museum. In 2024, Bartkus created âÂÂInfinity,â a series of portraits made using wire mesh and 100 kilograms of nails.
Since 2017, Bartkus has advocated for the creation of a memorial that acknowledges the Holocaust in Lithuania. He has made numerous public appearances wearing a âÂÂHolocaust Memorial, Lithuaniaâ t-shirt to raise awareness for this issue. He has worked to create dialogue on this issue between the Lithuanian Jewish Association, the American Jewish Committee, and the Vilnius mayor's office, among other groups.