[MSN] France. Undercover restorers fix Paris landmark's clock

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Tue Nov 27 09:08:33 CET 2007


Undercover restorers fix Paris landmark's clock

'Cultural guerrillas' cleared of lawbreaking over secret workshop in Pantheon

Emilie Boyer King in Paris
Monday November 26, 2007

Clock watching ... the Pantheon in Paris. Photograph: Alamy

It is one of Paris's most celebrated monuments, a neoclassical masterpiece that has cast its
shadow across the city for more than two centuries.
But it is unlikely that the Panthéon, or any other building in France's capital, will have
played host to a more bizarre sequence of events than those revealed in a court last week.

Four members of an underground "cultural guerrilla" movement known as the Untergunther, whose
purpose is to restore France's cultural heritage, were cleared on Friday of breaking into the
18th-century monument in a plot worthy of Dan Brown or Umberto Eco.

For a year from September 2005, under the nose of the Panthéon's unsuspecting security
officials, a group of intrepid "illegal restorers" set up a secret workshop and lounge in a
cavity under the building's famous dome. Under the supervision of group member Jean-Baptiste
Viot, a professional clockmaker, they pieced apart and repaired the antique clock that had been
left to rust in the building since the 1960s. Only when their clandestine revamp of the
elaborate timepiece had been completed did they reveal themselves.
"When we had finished the repairs, we had a big debate on whether we should let the Panthéon's
officials know or not," said Lazar Klausmann, a spokesperson for the Untergunther. "We decided
to tell them in the end so that they would know to wind the clock up so it would still work.

"The Panthéon's administrator thought it was a hoax at first, but when we showed him the clock,
and then took him up to our workshop, he had to take a deep breath and sit down."

The Centre of National Monuments, embarrassed by the way the group entered the building so
easily, did not take to the news kindly, taking legal action and replacing the administrator.

Getting into the building was the easiest part, according to Klausmann. The squad allowed
themselves to be locked into the Panthéon one night, and then identified a side entrance near
some stairs leading up to their future hiding place. "Opening a lock is the easiest thing for a
clockmaker," said Klausmann. From then on, they sneaked in day or night under the unsuspecting
noses of the Panthéon's officials.

"I've been working here for years," said a ticket officer at the Panthéon who wished to remain
anonymous. "I know every corner of the building. And I never noticed anything."

The hardest part of the scheme was carrying up the planks used to make chairs and tables to
furnish the Untergunther's cosy squat cum workshop, which has sweeping views over Paris.

The group managed to connect the hideaway to the electricity grid and install a computer
connected to the net.

Klausmann and his crew are connaisseurs of the Parisian underworld. Since the 1990s they have
restored crypts, staged readings and plays in monuments at night, and organised rock concerts
in quarries. The network was unknown to the authorities until 2004, when the police discovered
an underground cinema, complete with bar and restaurant, under the Seine. They have tried to
track them down ever since.

But the UX, the name of Untergunther's parent organisation, is a finely tuned organisation. It
has around 150 members and is divided into separate groups, which specialise in different
activities ranging from getting into buildings after dark to setting up cultural events.
Untergunther is the restoration cell of the network.

Members know Paris intimately. Many of them were students in the Latin Quarter in the 80s and
90s, when it was popular to have secret parties in Paris's network of tunnels. They have now
grown up and become nurses or lawyers, but still have a taste for the capital's underworld, and
they now have more than just partying on their mind.

"We would like to be able to replace the state in the areas it is incompetent," said Klausmann.
"But our means are limited and we can only do a fraction of what needs to be done. There's so
much to do in Paris that we won't manage in our lifetime."

The Untergunther are already busy working on another restoration mission Paris. The location is
top secret, of course. But the Panthéon clock remains one of its proudest feats.

"The Latin Quarter is where the concept of human rights came from, it's the centre of
everything. The Panthéon clock is in the middle of it. So it's a bit like the clock at the
centre of the world."

http://arts.guardian.co.uk/




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