Varotari had worked as a painter at the nearby monastery of Praglia, and here too he was involved in the pictoral decoration of the villa – with the assistance of the Greek-born Antonio Vassillacchi, known as L’Aliense (1556-1629).
However, it has yet to be established who is to be credited with the grotesques decorating the loggia on the south side: the high quality of both design and execution suggest the involvement of a specialist who had links with the Roman School or was close to Giovanni da Udine. Of the four rooms on the ground floor, the most interesting are those decorated by Varotari: the Camera della Vigna [Vine Room], whose ceiling is decorated with putti clambering around in a pergola of vine leaves and grapes, and the Camera delle Ville [Villa Room], which has views of the other villas owned by the Capodilista family, as well as an allegorical scene showing Time and Virtue Driving out Vice. The villa underwent restoration in the 1960s in work overseen by Mario Botter, who is also the author of a fine monograph on the place.