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November 25, 2017

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Giving ancient books, documents new life

YOU may not be able to judge the contents of a book by its cover, but you can often judge its age.

Book bindings and manuscript pages are vulnerable to the ravages of time and neglect. Ensuring that the classics of the past are not lost is the job of Zhang Pinfang and a team of specialists working in an unobtrusive corner of Shanghai Library.

Zhang, 50, is the head of the Document Preservation and Conservation Institute of the library. Over the past 10 years, the institute has repaired nearly 20,000 volumes, accounting for more than a 10th of China’s total manuscript restoration work.

Book restoration, a centuries-old craft in China, is indispensable in the preservation of ancient writings.

“Due to bad preservation practices of the past, we come across pages eaten by worms and paper that has grown extremely brittle,” says Zhang, pointing at a book awaiting repaired in her workshop. “The first step of restoration is usually cleaning.”

Every situation requires specialized treatment. Restoring a single page can take hours.

“Our work is of one of patience — the more you do, the calmer you become and the greater your focus,” says Zhang. “But it is also a race against time. There are too many books awaiting repair.”

According to a survey by National Library of China in 2012, the confirmed number of ancient books in public institutions nationwide totaled more than 50 million, with about a third in some form of disrepair. Shanghai Library alone houses 1.7 million ancient books and manuscripts, with about 400,000 requiring some level of restoration.

The task is formidable, but the library institute employs only about a dozen experts, who at most can handle 100 volumes a year. At the current pace, it will take hundreds of years to restore everything needing repair.

Zhang is a second-generation restorer at the library. Her career began in 1989 when she began work in the reader services department. Four years later, she was tapped to take a training course in book repair.

The workshop was initiated under a program sponsored by the Ministry of Culture, and her instructor was Zhao Jiafu, an expert then responsible for the library’s ancient book restoration department.

“I was probably chosen because I had a strong commitment to the library and to learning new skills,” Zhang says. “My quiet character also suited the job.”

Zhao taught his students the intricate skills of restoring books and engraved stone inscriptions.

“During the classes, the master told us that no single word or any piece of paper can be ignored in restoration,” Zhang says. “Even the margin of an ancient document is precious.”

Modern technology has improved the restoration task, speeding up the process. But machinery can repair only paper of fairly good durability because it requires soaking in a special liquid. Documents too vulnerable to withstand that process still require manual work.

In 2015, Zhang was asked to repair the fragmented diary of Pan Zuyin (1830-90), a senior official and famous collector of the late Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).

“When I received the manuscript, some of its fragments were smaller than the size of a Chinese character but formed part of a character,” says Zhang. “Looking at them, I could imagine the problems that might occur during the restoration.”

One challenge was the poor condition of the diary’s paper.

“Book restoration needs to touch liquid because you have to paste on scraps and padding to the original page,” Zhang explains. “But the ancient paper was mildewed and brittle. If you add too much paste, the scrap curls into a ball and resists being stretched out again. It felt as though a piece of ancient culture would disappear forever right in front of my eyes.”

Zhang handled the diary with kid gloves, carefully controlling the application of every dip of paste based on her intuition and experience. She also applied some special approaches during the restoration. 

Her persistence paid off. The diary was finally repaired.

“I am often asked if we make mistakes during book restoration,” says Zhang. “We aren’t allowed to make mistakes. Even if the final product is not perfect, there’s no going back.”

To Zhang, book restoration is an art form.

“Different books have different qualities, like the way they open and how the paper was originally made,” she says. “A restorer has to pay attention to many aspects. For example, the color of the paper used may hard to find in the contemporary market.”

She stopped to point at the margin of a repaired book, which is used to protect the book from damage when researchers are reading it.

“I had to dye the paper myself to match the color of the original book,” she says. “The old and the new should blend in harmoniously.”

Book restoration has trouble recruiting experts because the work is tiring and the pay nothing fancy. Many of the students who trained with Zhang in 1989 left the industry. At the same time, old professionals have retired.

In 2007, when there were less than 100 qualified book repair experts nationwide, China initiated a national project to nurture a new generation of professional restorers. The number of such experts has increased to nearly 1,000.

Beginning in 2012, centers have been set up around the country to train people in book restoration. Zhang is a teacher at centers in Shanghai and Hubei Province. She also teaches at Fudan University and the Shanghai Institute of Visual Arts.

She is also a master of restoration of engraved stone inscriptions and rubbings. In that realm, she has participated in major inscription projects, including work on the iconic inscription in the Longhua Martyrs’ Cemetery.

Led by her, Shanghai Library’s work in restoration has been listed as part of the city’s intangible cultural heritage.

“As antique collecting gains popularity, professionals with skills in restoration have become more sought-after,” Zhang says. “More attraction also means more distraction. For us technicians, what’s most important is to improve our skills and retain our integrity. This is what my master taught us, and I am following his wisdom.”




 

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