Appraisal: 1588 Braun & Hogenberg Atlas

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Appraiser
Ian Ehling

Bonhams, NY
New York, NY

APPRAISED VALUE (2015)

$40,000 - $60,000 Auction

Event
Tucson, AZ (2015)
Update: March 28, 2016
The first edition of the Braun & Hogenberg atlas, Civitates Orbis Terrarum, was published in 1572. Books & Manuscripts expert Ian Ehling appraised this 1588 edition for $40,000 to $60,000 (auction) during the March 28th Tucson Hour 1 show. On the question of whether it would be more lucrative to sell this atlas as a whole and complete work, or broken up into its individual plates (which has been the more conventional option), he said this about today’s market:  “Nowadays the trend is that a work that’s left complete actually achieves a higher price than the individual plates sold separately.” Which led him to his auction estimate based on the intact book as a complete work. But expert opinion is not unanimous on this point. Though fellow appraiser Ken Gloss says he agrees with Ehling, Martin Gammon, another experienced ROADSHOW colleague, did not. And yet another ROADSHOW expert, rare maps specialist Chris Lane, emphasizes above all that this is a case-by-case question: “It’s a tough one. … It’s true that in some cases with particularly rare books, the value of the [whole] book is higher than the ‘break-up value’ — a trend that has really come along in the last decade or so. However, that’s still the exception rather than the rule. Most plate books are not that rare and would have more value as individual plates than as an unbroken book.” Gloss also points out that it can often take more time to sell an atlas plate by plate — particularly when a few of the map plates may be much more desirable than the others. He says in some cases it could even take years to see all the plates sold individually — so understandably this too will usually form part of the consideration when deciding how to bring such a rare book to market.
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