Subject: Book conservation and ethics
I am in the process of writing an article and have been reviewing DistList postings from June and July 1993, among other gangling things, which had to do with collections conservation as well as the AIC Code of Ethics revision. And I have some questions for any of you to respond to back to this list. 1. Where does rare book conservation fit into the Code or the Standards of Practice? I am thinking about this in terms of AIC's definition of conservation (Bylaws--2(a), p. 13, 1994 Directory) in relation to "respect for the integrity of [the] object" (COE-II.A; SOP-II.A; COE-II.C) and "limitations on aesthetic reintegration" (COE-II.F; SOP-II.E). a. Does rebinding and recovering a rare book violate "unswerving respect for the aesthetic, historic and physical integrity of the object"? Doesn't rebinding, recovering, etc. modify the "known character of the original"? Is book conservation outside of the normal meaning of the "integrity of the object" as known by, say, art conservators? (In the following discussion I am assuming a full conservation treatment for a "rare" book.) It seems to me that anytime we resew a book, apply new liners and endpapers, cover it with new boards and coverings, apply new spine labels, that we are modifying the characteristics of the original. (I am not presuming this to be either a good or bad thing here.) And this list of possible conservation treatments doesn't consider washing, deacidification, and mending, among other things! Aren't we saving, then, by providing a book with a full treatment, only the text leaves in their proper order (since they will probably be resewn in a manner at least, at the very minimum, slightly different from the original sewing) over preserving the original object/artifact reaching our hands? In addition, does/should it matter that we may/may not have saved the original sewing thread, endbands, endpapers, spine liners,and boards due to the reconstructive conservation surgery and placed everything into a box, along with the newly put to life Frankenstein book, for future bibliographical or codicological study? For that matter, what good would photodocumentation be, other than being a cheap and totally inadequate two-dimensional surrogate of the original, because the photos cannot tell us how the book felt or looked (up close) or operated prior to treatment? Within this context I would say that photos are not worth and are a sad analog to the words used to describe what they are depicting. Are we destroying evidence of its original/aboriginal construction/reconstruction? And what is the good of reversible treatments when we have so altered or transmogrified the original? Rare book conservation is not art restoration, at least as far as I understand the difference or similarities between the two. Don Etherington has said, in a DistList posting from the same time period as mentioned above, that alteration of the original, as it existed when the conservator received it for treatment, is always the case with rare book conservation. Are book conservators acting unethically when they practice their craft and skills, even when act with the very best of intentions, act with the best interests of the book in mind? Is the end more important than the means used to achieve it? 2. One of the posters from July's DistList suggested that book repair and collection maintenance have nothing to do with "conservation." Primarily because book repair and collection maintenance don't consider conservation of the object but rather the extended usability of the format in which the text or information is conveyed--the book/codex form in this case. Following this point of view, artifactual value and physical evidence have lower importance than the mandate to place the book back in service as soon as possible. This goes contrary to the treatment of other collections of materials in other cultural institutions as well as against any real or implied AIC code of ethics or standards of practice. Any comments here? I look forward to your rousing thoughts. Sorry for "spewing" forth at the mouth. Isn't rational inquiry lovely? Apologies to those who are rolling their eyes or shedding their skins. Doesn't someone bring this stuff up regularly and everyone just as regularly and collectively ignore it? PS Don't dis your list. Robert J. Milevski *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:69 Distributed: Friday, April 1, 1994 Message Id: cdl-7-69-005 ***Received on Friday, 1 April, 1994