CALYO, Nicolino (1799-1884).
American Landscape [Upper Mississippi River].
Oil on canvas.
signed and dated: "Nicolino Calyo pinto 1853".
25 1/8” x 32 7/8” canvas, 32 1/2” x 40 1/4” framed.

Comparable: Sotheby’s, March 3, 2021 - $ 88,200.

Nicolino Calyo's career reflects a restless spirit of enterprise and adventure. Descended in the line of the Viscontes di Calyo of Calabria, the artist was the son of a Neapolitan army officer. (See the brief biographical sketch by Kathleen Foster, prefacing catalogue entry no. 257 in Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia: Three Centuries of American Art, exhib. cat., [1976], pp. 299-301.) Calyo received formal training in art at the Naples Academy. His career took shape amidst the backdrop of the political turbulence of early nineteenth century Italy, Spain, and France. He fled Naples after choosing the losing side of struggles of 1820-21, and, by 1829 was part of an Italian exile community in Malta. This was the keynote of a peripatetic life that saw the artist travel through Europe, to America, to Europe again, and back to America.

Paradoxically, Calyo's stock-in-trade was close observation of people and places, meticulously rendered in the precise topographical tradition of his fellow countrymen, Antonio Canale (called Canaletto) and Francesco Guardi. In search of artistic opportunity and in pursuit of a living, Calyo left Malta, and, by 1834, was on the opposite side of the great Atlantic Ocean, in Baltimore, Maryland. He advertised his skills in the April 16, 1835, edition of the Baltimore American, offering "remarkable views executed from drawings taken on the spot by himself,... in which no pains or any resource of his art has been neglected, to render them accurate in every particular" (as quoted in The Art Gallery and The Gallery of the School of Architecture, University of Maryland College Park, 350 Years of Art & Architecture in Maryland [1984], p. 35). Favoring gouache on paper as his medium, Calyo rendered faithful visual images of familiar locales executed with a degree of skill and polish that was second nature for European academically-trained artists. Indeed, it was the search for this graceful fluency that made American artists eager to travel to Europe and that led American patrons to seek out the works of ambitious newcomers.

Calyo’s American Landscape bears great resemblance to another view by the artist entitled Montagne de Soaking sur le haut du Mississippi, from an album he produced in 1844. Montagne de Soaking, present day Trempealeau (trempe à l’eau) Mountain, is situated along the upper Mississippi River in Wisconsin. Steamboat travel along the Mississippi reached its peak in the mid-nineteenth century, making scenic areas along its course, including Trempealeau Mountain, popular destinations for those travelers. While it is known that Calyo travelled down the Mississippi to New Orleans in 1837 for an exhibition of his work and again in 1852 to display his panorama on the Mexican American War, it is uncertain whether he travelled north towards Wisconsin. It is possible that Calyo’s views of Trempealeau are adapted from an 1839 steel engraving by Henry Jordan after James Charles Ward.

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by Arader Galleries
June 27, 2026 1:00 PM EDT
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