Joseph Pickett (born 1848, New Hope, Pennsylvania, U.S.—died 1918, New Hope) was an American folk painter known for his primitive depictions of town and landscape around his native New Hope, Pennsylvania.
After a life spent as a carpenter, shipbuilder, carny, and storekeeper, Pickett began painting when he was about 65. Pickett’s work exemplifies his detailed interest in local landscape and history, executed with a disregard for perspective but with a solid sense of colour and flat-pattern design (e.g., Manchester Valley [c. 1914–18]). Pickett’s works were not discovered by art critics or the public until the 1930s.