| by Susan Stiles Dowell Photos by Susan McWhinney |
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| Global Interest | |||||
| American globes lend multifaceted interest to today's interiors. Here's what to keep in mind before you invest in a collection | |||||
| Ever since Greek geographer Crates of Mallus constructed a sphere in the second century B.C. to represent Earth, globes have given us a way to comprehend geography. Not in two millennia have they lost their capacity to fascinate or, as today’s antiques marketplace suggests, to adorn the home with an air of scholarship.
Globes were originally produced in pairs—terrestrial and celestial. The latter was used for astronomy, while the former facilitated the study of everything from geography to the mathematics of calculating distances. In the 18th century, globes were largely imported from Britain. “The American globe industry began with the War of 1812, when Americans began to assert their economic and cultural independence from England,” says Deborah Jean Warner of the National Museum of American History. Dating can be tricky because after 1900, the year is not usually present on the cartouche. Warner suggests boning up on history. Globes changed as nations rose and fell, and the dates of those events help pinpoint the date of production. Also notice the stand. “It is usually in the furniture style of the period,” says dealer George Glazer. Today, old globes offer an attractive and tangible record of history. “They have the cachet of collectibles for their intellectual component and beauty,” says Glazer. Globes pictured are from George Glazer Gallery. For contact information, see Resources below.
RESOURCES: George Glazer Gallery, 212/535-5706, www.georgeglazer.com; National Museum of American History, 202/633-1000, www.americanhistory.si.edu. |
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