Konstantin Simonov | Konstantin Zatulin | Konstantin Wecker | Konstantin Krause | Konstantin Kinchev | Konstantin Ushinsky | Konstantin Thon | Konstantin Somov | Konstantin Biebl | Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich of Russia | Konstantin Rykov | Konstantin Raikin | Konstantin Paustovsky | Konstantin Novoselov | Konstantin Melnikov | Konstantin Meladze | Konstantin Leselidze | Konstantin Chernenko | Konstantin Buteyko | Traugott Konstantin Oesterreich | ''The Bulgarian martyresses'' by Konstantin Makovsky | ''The Bulgarian Martyresses'' (1877), a painting by Konstantin Makovsky | Phil Konstantin | Konstantin Trenyov | Konstantin Svechkar | Konstantin Rokossovsky | Konstantin Pobedonostsev | Konstantin Mikhailov | Konstantin Kuznetsov (cinematographer) | Konstantin Kostenko |
Despite its revolutionary title, it successfully united artists of the "old school" like Abram Arkhipov, Aleksandr Makovsky, Nikolay Kasatkin, Konstantin Yuon and the younger ones like Sergei Gerasimov and Isaak Brodsky.
To work at the Institute he attracts major artists and educators Konstantin Yuon, Pavel Naumov, Boris Ioganson, Alexander Lubimov, Rudolf Frentz, Nikolai Petrov, Vasily Shuhaev, Dmitry Kiplik, Nikolai Punin, Vasily Meshkov, Mikhail Bernshtein, Yefim Cheptsov, Ivan Bilibin, Matvey Manizer, Piotr Buchkin, Anna Ostroumova-Lebedeva, Alexander Karev, Leonid Ovsyannikov, Sergei Priselkov, Ivan Stepashkin, Konstantin Rudakov, and others.
In 1909-1910 Kalmykov lived in Moscow where he attended the Moscow Art School (studio of Konstantin Yuon, and from late 1919 in St.Petersburg where he was a member of the art studios of Mstislav Dobuzhinsky and Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin.