Anton Ginzburg (full name: Anton Giliarovich Ginzburg; 18 September 1930 – 19 July 2002) was a Soviet and Russian pianist. In some cases he used the pseudonym Anton Osetrov for recordings and performances. In 1996 he was awarded the title Honored Artist of the Russian Federation.
He graduated from the Central Music School in 1948, where he studied with E. P. Hoven, and from the Moscow Conservatory in 1953, where he studied in the class of Heinrich Neuhaus. In 1957 he became one of the winners of the international piano competition held within the Prague Spring Festival.
Ginzburg performed and recorded as a soloist, but he was especially known for his ensemble playing. He collaborated notably with the cellists Daniil Shafran and Mikhail Khomitser, as well as with the violinist Igor Oistrakh.
Musicologists Ya. Platek and L. Grigoriev wrote that critics repeatedly emphasized Ginzburg's artistic initiative and musicality, his varied technical command, the expressiveness of his tonal palette, and his temperament. He was buried at Vostryakovskoye Cemetery.