Béla Iványi Grünwald (born May 6, 1867, Somogysom, Hung.—died Sept. 24, 1940, Budapest) was a Hungarian painter, one of the founders of the Nagybánya artists’ colony.
Grünwald studied at the School of Design in Budapest under Bertalan Székely, at Simon Hollósy’s private school in Munich, and at the Académie Julian in Paris. From 1889 he was a leading figure in the Hungarian arts community. In 1894 he visited Egypt. He executed a huge historical painting, Tatárjárás (1896; “Invasion of the Tatars”), to commemorate Hungary’s millenary. In the same year he settled in Nagybánya (now Baia Mare, Rom.) and was one of the first plein air painters in Hungary. His art was strongly influenced by the style of his friend Károly Ferenczy. His Nagybánya paintings portray typical Hungarian scenes, often with figures in costume. In 1904 he received a scholarship to work in Rome. From 1907 Grünwald began to distance himself from the naturalistic style of his Nagybánya paintings, and he moved to the artists’ colony in Kecskemét. In 1920 he started painting impressionist landscapes. His famous works include Bércek között (1901; “Between Peaks”) and Itatás (1902; “Watering”).