2
fig1 The perspective view of Venice of Jacopo de’ Barbari
The idea that the perspective construction of the view
might have been realised beginning with a plan and using
elevations is fascinating for those involved in cartography
because it presupposes the existence of a survey of the
city or at least, given the particular character of the urban
structure of Venice, of a series of reference points
probably positioned in bell towers and surveyed using
triangulation or a polar coordinates.
The studies have been addressed in part to evaluating the
shifting of the view with respect to a “correct” geometry
and on the other, to construct the instruments for
understanding and fruition of the work for a general public
which may not be specialised. The analysis and the
spreading of the cartography, apparently quite far from
each other, have an analytical and geometric apparatus in
common: they are based on the same geometric and
mathematical considerations and use the same
instruments, the same calculation equipment, the same
methods. These, although derived from the survey and
modern analytical cartography disciplines, have assumed
their own particular connotations and peculiarities, leading
to a definition of a methodology for the quantitative
analysis of the historic cartography.
fig2 The photoplane of Venice utilized as the reference cartography