Antonino or Antonio Leto (June 14, 1844 – May 31, 1913 in Capri, Italy)[1] was an Italian painter, painting mainly genre/landscape subjects in an impressionistic style.
There he painted livelier cityscapes including Case a Viareggio,[4] Ponte di Santi Trinita, and Passeggiata alle Cascine.
By 1880, he returned to Palermo, where he decorated the room of the Villa ai Colli (now Opera Pia Istituto Pignatelli) with lively vedute and genre scenes.
His I funari di Torre del Greco (1883) was celebrated at the National Exposition of Fine Arts of Rome, and now hangs in the Chamber of Deputies.
[5][6] [7] Together with Francesco Lojacono and Michele Catti, he forms the so-called canonical triad of the Sicilian landscape artists of the Belle Époque.