Lane's Improved Globe, London.
London,
[Thomas Lane,
after c1830].
Globe, 12 copper-plate hand-coloured paper gores, over a papier mâché and plaster sphere, housed within shagreen over paste-board clamshell case with red painted rim, with hooks and eyes, lined with two sets of 12 finely engraved and hand-coloured celestial gores. A few areas of abrasion to the surface of the globe.
Diameter: 70mm (2.75 inches).
15666
notes:
Biography
The present globe is the work of Thomas Lane (fl1801-1829), son of Nicholas Lane, whose business was particularly associated with pocket globes. When Dudley Adams went bankrupt in 1817, the copper plates appear to have come into the hands of the Lane firm. Adams had in turn purchased these plates from James Ferguson.
Lane updated the old cartouche to include his name. However, the name of the engraver, J. Mynde, was kept just below the cartouche. L...
The present globe is the work of Thomas Lane (fl1801-1829), son of Nicholas Lane, whose business was particularly associated with pocket globes. When Dudley Adams went bankrupt in 1817, the copper plates appear to have come into the hands of the Lane firm. Adams had in turn purchased these plates from James Ferguson.
Lane updated the old cartouche to include his name. However, the name of the engraver, J. Mynde, was kept just below the cartouche. L...
bibliography:
Dekker, fig. 9.103, see GLB0012 for a version after 1833; for reference see Sumira 35 and 45; Worms and Baynton- Williams, p.387.
provenance: