Unlike some struggling artists, Claire Roth has real
talent. However, she has made some very
poor judgment calls. Like Margaret
Keane, the subject of the movie Big Eyes,
Claire has allowed a man to take credit for her work. The fallout from that mistake has made her a
pariah in the art world, until a prestigious gallery owner, Aiden Markel,
offers her a deal. Claire has been eking
out a living reproducing famous paintings, and Markel will pay her handsomely
and give her a showing at his gallery in return for reproducing a stolen
Degas. This opportunity to restore her
reputation is a temptation that Claire can hardly pass up, even if what she’s
doing may not be strictly legal. She
figures that forgery is only a crime if she is misrepresenting the reproduction
as the original, but still she’s walking a thin line here. Markel claims that he will return the
original to the Gardner Museum, from whence it was stolen in a heist of several
masterpieces. Things start to look fishy
when Claire begins to suspect that the original Degas she is copying may
actually also be a forgery. In that
case, the thieves unwittingly stole a forgery that was hanging in the museum,
causing Claire to wonder what happened to the original. Markel is charming and persuasive but perhaps
a tad shady and not completely forthcoming about where the “original” came from
and where Claire’s copy is going.
Claire, on the other hand, is just suspicious enough of Markel to keep
her doubts about the original’s authenticity to herself. This is a juicy, highly entertaining novel
about betrayal, obsession, scandal, subterfuge, and certainly the art world, from
the perspective of Claire, a blackballed outsider doing whatever it takes to
maneuver her way back in. She’s
dedicated, meticulous, talented, and tenacious, and deserves a break, despite
not necessarily having followed the straight and narrow path. Flawed characters often make the most
compelling characters.
2 comments:
I really enjoyed this one too- so much that I went to the author's website to see what else she wrote.
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