Vito D'Anna (14 October 1718 – 13 October 1769) was an Italian painter, considered the most prominent painter of Palermitan rococo and one of the most important artists of Sicily.
He studied in Acireale under Pietro Paolo Vasta from 1736 to 1744, when he returned to Palermo.
[1] Returning to Palermo, Vito married the daughter of the Catanese painter Olivio Sozzi.
Sozzi helped arrange D'Anna to work with the circle of an aged Corrado Giaquinto in Rome.
Among his works were: his fresco of the Madonna dei Raccomandati in the church of the same name, his Nativity in the church della Grotta, Self-portrait in the Pinacoteca Zelantea.