A Perspective on Maps and their Place in the Heavens
- By Bruce McKinney
The 1513 Tabula Terre Nove by Waldseemuller [offered by Martayan Lan]
By Bruce McKinney
The April Comet
When people think about books and look online they seem at first glance to be a
single universe. Fiction and non-fiction exist side by side as do books just
published and those printed five hundred years ago. Illustrated books,
childrens books, illustrated material, autobiography, books on ants and others on
elephants are all one click away. This is because online listing sites tend to
arrange material alphabetically by author or title and sort it in ascending or
descending price order. The difference between an original printing and a
reproduction of the Gutenberg Bible therefore will be price and the distinctions
sorted out by the listing-reader. These differences are of course extraordinary
but for many, perhaps even most, works on paper these variations are less apparent
and therefore more difficult to understand. Such difficult to understand but
important distinctions coupled with the public's collecting interest, are the
principal drivers for the development of specialist dealers, the polar opposite of
the generalist bookseller upon which the book business has been built. The
generalist can be said to know the distance from Palm Beach to London, the
specialist the depth and temperature of the water. In the map field, a narrow
category and the subject of this month's Comet, there is plenty of room for both
perspectives because while there are always collectors seeking the Everests there
are more that climb the Shawangunks, the Catskills and the Piedmonts and feel
well-compensated if they find an item of personal interest. The very existance of
AE is evidence of this broad based interest for here, while we are focused on rare
and collectible works on paper, we understand the fun is unearthing the right item
whether it is $40 or $40,000.
Within the world of collectible works on paper one of the strongest and perhaps
even the strongest segment is cartography [it's a map if its says Esso, cartography
if it costs more than $1,000]. This field manages to win the trifecta because it's
often interesting and attractive to both the collector and their spouse for whom the
collection is history and attractive presentation. A library of course will
do this too but libraries do not announce themselves so well as maps [and images
for that matter] that can tell their story when framed and mounted on walls. Maps also gain from the
multiple communities that offer them. Some maps are independent productions but
many others begin life as an image in an atlas or book and hence are bought and
sold in the world of books. Even as recently as the 1950's Howes' Usiana accorded
little additional value to books with maps. Content, maps and images had parity.
Today maps live on the other side of the rainbow, a pricing trend that Graham
Arader, the exceptional map dealer, recently explained this way:
"Map prices have increased at a 400% rate per decade over the past 40 years. With Smiley [the Edward Scissorhands of library map plundering now in jail], others out of the picture and map librarians more diligent and protective, the artificial liquidity in exceptional maps evident the past 10 years, is passing and prices are rising. Looking ahead I expect as much as a 30 fold increase over the next 10 years in the value of important maps as scarcity increases. Even pedestrian material will do well. Images are in their moment."
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A Perspective on Maps and their Place in the Heavens
- By Bruce McKinney
A 1520 Tipus Orbis Universalis offered by The 19th Century Shop
Hence their power. Every collector confronts the complex demands of
acquisition, ownership, use and display. Maps and images broadly extend the
possibilities.
This month AE's Books for Sale members offer more than five hundred items that
range from a curious but common piece for a few dollars all the way up to examples
of the exquisitely rare that are listed as POR, price on request. Maps tell a
great story, both about the collection and the collector. Here is an interesting
opportunity to know more about the world at large and your collecting instincts and
approach.
This month the Comet includes more than 600 items from the inventories of AE Books for Sale members. Prices range from a few dollars to a few hundred thousand dollars. It's an interesting selection and well worth a close examination. All items include links to directly contact the dealer.
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