Save the French Imprimerie
Nationale heritage
Urgent action needed to save the heritage of the French government
printing organization
The French government is currently engaged
in selling off various buildings and businesses of the Imprimerie
nationale Group, a commercial limited-liability company in which
the French state is sole shareholder. This is being done with
no thought to any separate solution to preserve its historic heritage
- part of which is covered by a preservation requirement, being
classified as a "historic monument" - other than to
pack it into crates for permanent storage. This move is scheduled
for the first half of 2005, destination unknown.
The historic collection it holds - due
to be so dispatched - is a unique, priceless testimony of the
history of the written form, from the 16th century to the present.
It includes the Cabinet des poinçons, or Punch Room, holding hundred
of thousands of letterform and character punches, for both western
and oriental scripts; functional workshops - a foundry, presses
for typography, lithography and copper-plate engraving work, stitching
and binding - as well as a library with over 30,000 volumes, and
the archives of the State printing works. Set up in 1539 by King
Francis I, at the same time as the College de France, the national
center of academic excellence, this collection stands as the memory
of specialized know-how and expertise, and as a center for creation,
now fated to disappear if its continued survival is not ensured.
This whole must not be scattered or split
up, as regards either its contents, or its functions: museum and
conservation, typeface creation, publishing and research. It must
be released from the oversight of a ministerial department driven
by concerns of economic profitability. This heritage must be housed
in Paris, held by an institution guaranteed adequate resources,
having the capacity to further enlarge and expand it. Better still,
it could be set up as a foundation - a controlled, non-profit
organization - which would be a dedicated space for conservation,
but equally of interfacing with outside elements, and for research.
Concurrently, and as of now, measures should be taken to ensure
that the transfer of equipment and expertise proceed speedily,
using a transition formula, with no interruption to production,
conservation, research or training activities.
Priceless artifacts must be saved, but
equally persons, skills, a store of knowledge must be safeguarded,
that are at risk of being lost to all humankind.
We demand that all possible action be taken
to stop this vandalism. What is at stake are the very foundations
of our own history, and of the dissemination of human thought,
ideas and knowledge. We refuse to see them destroyed.
[This petition and all signatures will
be sent to the President of the French Republic.]
Translated from the French by Chris Durban
& Jean-François Roberts
P.-S. The Imprimerie nationale is heir
to the centuries-old tradition of French government printing,
starting with the Imprimerie royale, set up by Cardinal Richelieu
under King Louis XIII, in the 17th century, with forerunners from
the Renaissance. As such, it is broadly equivalent to the US Government
Printing Office, or the UK Stationery office (HMSO). Aside from
printing many government books and publications (until recently
the French phone books), it also has a specialized fiduciary business.
Laws and decrees, and government appointments, decorations, etc.
are handled by a separate organization, the Journaux officiels
(also publishers of parliamentary proceedings and papers).
To support our petition, please fill up
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