Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Why are globes so alluring?

Even in the age of Google Earth, people still buy them ...

- By Laurie Kellman

LONDON — Find a globe in your local library or classroom and try this: Close the eyes, spin it and drop a finger randomly on its curved, glossy surface.

You’re likely to pinpoint a spot in the water, which covers 71% of the planet. Maybe you’ll alight on a place you’ve never heard of — or a spot that no longer exists after a war or because of climate change. Perhaps you’ll feel inspired to find out who lives there and what it’s like. Trace the path of totality ahead of Monday’s solar eclipse. Look carefully, and you’ll find the cartouche — the globemaker’s signature — and the antipode (look it up) of where you’re standing right now.

In the age of Google Earth, watches that triangulat­e and cars with built-in GPS, there’s something about a globe — a spherical representa­tion of the world in miniature — that somehow endures.

London globemaker Peter Bellerby thinks the human yearning to “find our place in the cosmos” has helped globes survive their original purpose — navigation — and the internet. He says it’s part of the reason he went into debt making a globe for his father’s 80th birthday in 2008. The experience helped inspire his company, and 16 years later is keeping his team of about two dozen artists, cartograph­ers and woodworker­s employed.

“You don’t go onto Google Earth to get inspired,” Mr. Bellerby says in his airy studio, surrounded by dozens of globes in various languages and states of completion. “A globe is very much something that connects you to the planet that we live on.”

Or, as Scottish-born American explorer John Muir wrote in 1915: “When we contemplat­e the whole globe as one great dewdrop, striped and dotted with continents and islands, flying through space with other stars all singing and shining together as one, the whole universe appears as an infinite storm of beauty.”

Beyond the existentia­l and historical appeal, earthly matters such as cost and geopolitic­s hover over globemakin­g. Mr. Bellerby says his company has experience with customs officials in regions with disputed borders such as India, China, North Africa and the Middle East.

And there is a real question about whether globes — especially handmade orbs — remain relevant as more than works of art and history for those who can afford them. They are, after all, snapshots of the past — of the way their patrons and makers saw the world at a certain point in time. So they’re inherently inaccurate representa­tions of a planet in constant flux.

“Do globes play a relevant role in our time? If so, then in my opinion, this is due to their appearance as a threedimen­sional body, the hardto-control desire to turn them, and the attractive­ness of their map image,” says Jan Mokre, vice president of the Internatio­nal Coronelli Society for the Study of Globes in Vienna. “Perhaps a certain nostalgia effect also plays a role, just as old cars and mechanical watches still exert a certain attraction on people.”

Joshua Nall, Director of the Whipple Museum of the History of Science in Cambridge, says a globe remains a display of “the learning, the erudition, the political interests of its owner.”

“Sadly, I think globe usage probably is declining, perhaps particular­ly in the school setting, where digital technologi­es are taking over,” Mr. Nall says. “I think now they’re perhaps more becoming items of overt prestige. They’re being bought as display pieces to look beautiful, which of course they alwayshave been.”

Mr. Bellerby’s globes aren’t cheap. They run from about 1,290 British pounds (about $1,900) for the smallest to six figures for the 50inch Churchill model. He makes about 600 orbs a year of varying size, framing and ornamentat­ion.

Creating them is a complex process that starts with the constructi­on of a sphere and progresses to the applicatio­n of fragile petal-shaped panels, called “gores,” that are fitted together around the sphere’s surface. Artists perched around Mr. Bellerby’s London studio painstakin­gly blend and apply paint — dreamy cobalt and mint for the oceans, yellow, greens and ochre for the landscape.

The imagery painted on the globes runs the gamut, from constellat­ions to mountains and sea creatures. And here, The Associated Press can confirm, be dragons.

Mr. Bellerby doesn’t name clients, but he says they come from more socioecono­mic levels than you’d think — from families to businesses and heads of state. Private art collectors come calling. So do moviemaker­s.

Mr. Bellerby says in his book that the company made four globes for the 2011 movie, “Hugo.” One globe can be seen in the 2023 movie “Tetris,” including one, a freestandi­ng straight-leg Galileo model, which features prominentl­y in a scene.

And yes, some of the planet’s wealthiest people buy them. The family of German tool and hardware company chairman Reinhold Wurth gave him a Churchill, the largest model, for his 83rd birthday. It is now on display at the Museum Wurth 2 in Berlin.

His granddaugh­ter, Maria Wurth, says in an Instagram video that the piece highlights the history of the company and the magnate’s travels.

‘A political minefield’

There is no internatio­nal standard for a correctly drawn earth. Countries, like people, view the world differentl­y, and some are highly sensitive about how their territory is depicted. To offend them with “incorrectl­y” drawn borders on a globe is to risk impoundmen­t of the orbs at customs.

“Globemakin­g,” Mr. Bellerby writes, “is a political minefield.”

China doesn’t recognize Taiwan as a country. Morocco doesn’t recognize Western Sahara. India’s northern border is disputed. Many Arab countries, such as Lebanon, don’t acknowledg­e Israel.

Mr. Bellerby says the company marks disputed borders as disputed: “We cannot change or rewrite history.”

Scientists since antiquity, famously Plato and Aristotle, posited that the earth is not flat but closer to a sphere. (More precisely, it’s a spheroid — bulging at the equator, squashed at the poles).

No one knows when the first terrestria­l globe was created. But the oldest known surviving one dates to 1492. No one in Europe knew of the existence of North or South America at the time.

If you’ve got a globe of any sort, you’re in good company. During World War II, two in particular were commission­ed for leaders on opposite sides of the Atlantic as symbols of power and partnershi­p.

For Christmas in 1942, the United States delivered gigantic twin globes to American president Franklin Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. They were 50 inches in diameter and hundreds of pounds each, believed to be the largest and most accurate globes of the time.

It took more than 50 government geographer­s, cartograph­ers, and draftsmen to compile the informatio­n to make the globe, constructe­d by the Weber Costello Company of Chicago Heights, Ill.

The Roosevelt globe now sits at the Roosevelt Library in Hyde Park, N.Y., and Churchill’s globe is at Chartwell House, the Churchill family home in Kent, England, according to the U.S. Library of Congress.

 ?? Kin Cheung/Associated Press photos ?? Peter Bellerby made his first globe for his father, after he could not find one accurate or attractive enough. In 2008, he founded Bellerby & Co. Globemaker­s in London. His team of dozens of artists and cartograph­ers has made thousands of bespoke globes up to 50 inches in diameter. The most ornate can cost six figures.
Kin Cheung/Associated Press photos Peter Bellerby made his first globe for his father, after he could not find one accurate or attractive enough. In 2008, he founded Bellerby & Co. Globemaker­s in London. His team of dozens of artists and cartograph­ers has made thousands of bespoke globes up to 50 inches in diameter. The most ornate can cost six figures.
 ?? ?? Globes in the age of Google Earth capture the imaginatio­n and serve as snapshots of how the owners see the world and their place in it.
Globes in the age of Google Earth capture the imaginatio­n and serve as snapshots of how the owners see the world and their place in it.
 ?? ?? Peter Bellerby, the founder of Bellerby & Co. Globemaker­s, covers a globe at his studio in London on Feb. 27.
Peter Bellerby, the founder of Bellerby & Co. Globemaker­s, covers a globe at his studio in London on Feb. 27.

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