Barbaro may have designed the
Palazzo Trevisan in
Murano, alone or in collaboration with Palladio. Like at the
Villa Barbaro,
Paolo Veronese and
Alessandro Vittoria probably also worked on the project, which was completed in 1557. His works include: • (1542)
Exquisitae in Porphyrium Commentationes. • (1542) ''Predica de' sogni'', published under the pseudonym of Reverend padre Hypneo da Schio. • (1544) Edited an edition of the commentaries on Aristotle's
Rhetoric written by his great-uncle
Ermolao Barbaro. • (1545) Edited an edition of Ermolao Barbaro's
Compendium scientiae naturalis. • (1556) An Italian translation with extended commentary of
Vitruvius'
Ten Books of Architecture, published as ''Dieci libri dell'architettura di M. Vitruvio''. The work was dedicated to Cardinal
Ippolito II d'Este, patron of the
Villa d'Este at
Tivoli. • (1567) He later simultaneously published a revised Italian edition and a Latin edition entitled
M. Vitruvii de architectura. The original illustrations of Vitruvius' work have not survived, and Barbaro's illustrations were done specially by
Andrea Palladio, and engraved by Johann Chrieger. As well as being important as a discussion of architecture, Barbaro's commentary was a contribution to the field of aesthetics in general.
El Greco, for example, owned a copy. Earlier translations had been made, by Fra Giovanni Giocondo (1511) and Cesare Cesariano (1521), but this work was considered the most accurate version to date. Barbaro clearly explained some of the more technical sections and discussed the relationship between nature and architecture, though he also acknowledged the way Palladio's theoretical and archeological expertise contributed to the work. In his commentary, Barbaro shows knowledge of
Pedro de Medina's
Art of Navigation as well as the works of
Leon Battista Alberti,
Federico Commandino,
Albrecht Dürer,
Sebastian Münster,
Johannes Stabius and
Johannes Werner. • (1567) ''Dell'Eloquenza Dialogo'' • (1568)
La pratica della perspettiva, a book on perspective for artists and architects. This work describes how to use a
lens with a
camera obscura. • an unpublished and unfinished treatise on the construction of sundials (
De Horologiis describendis libellus, Venice,
Biblioteca Marciana,
Cod. Lat. VIII, 42, 3097). The latter work was supposed to have discussed other instruments as well, including the
astrolabe, the
planisphere of Spanish mathematician
Juan de Rojas, the
navigation instrument
cross-staff, the
torquetum, an
astronomical instrument and
Abel Foullon's holometer, a surveying instrument. ==See also==