Kitagawa Tsukimaro (Japanese: 喜多川 月麿,) was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist. He was one of the most successful students of Kitagawa Utamaro ( – 1806), from whom he took the -maro. His early works bear the name "Kikumaro", first written Japanese: 菊麿 (kiku meaning "chrysanthemum") until 1802, then Japanese: 喜久麿 (kiku meaning "joy eternal") until he changed it in 1804 to "Tsukimaro" (tsuki meaning "moon").
Little is known of Tsukimaro's life. His personal name was Jun (Japanese: 潤) but he also had other nicknames (Japanese: 子達 or Japanese: 士達). He worked as a watchman in Kodenmachō Sanchōme in Edo (modern Tokyo), and at some point apprenticed under Utamaro. He specialized in bijin-ga portrait prints of female beauties. In 1804 he was one of the artists along with Utamaro who were arrested and manacled for making illegal prints of the 16th-century military leader Toyotomi Hideyoshi. Around 1820 he changed his name to Kansetsu (Japanese: 観雪) and turned to scroll paintings in the Maruyama–Maruyama–Shijō style. His last dated work is an illustration for a kyōka poetry anthology of 1836. He also used the art names Sumitei (Japanese: 墨亭) and Shūsai (Japanese: 逎斎).