[1][2] Domenico later moved to Central Italy, where, in the mid-15th century, he contributed to the Santa Maria di Collemaggio in L'Aquila.
[3] He might have been one of the artists who built the triumphal arch of Castel Nuovo in Naples.
[4] His name appears in the Trattato di Architettura by Filarete, who cites him as one of the artists who might have contributed to the creation of the imaginary ideal city Sforzinda.
[4] Domenico's best-known work is the octagonal chapel of Vicovaro, commissioned by Francesco Orsini, which he started in 1454.
[5] His works are distinguished by "simple and harmonious architecture", partly in the style of the late Gothic, also enriched by elements of the flourishing Venetian Renaissance.