The art may be fake, but the murder is genuine..., February 23, 2010
A review of A Deceptive Clarity (Mass Market Paperback) by Aaron J. Elkins
A US Army soldier finds three masterpiece paintings in an old salt mine near Saltzburg, Germany. A Titian, a Rubens, and a Vermeer. These treasures had been stolen from an Italian collector's palazzo in Florence in August 1944 by fleeing Nazis.
Enter Army Colonel Mark Robey. Let's have an art exhibition for the newly-found art, persuade Claudio Bolzano to loan other works, and provide some favorable press in Berlin for the U. S. Forces. And so Treasures of Four Centuries: The Plundered Past Recovered is launched.
Enter Chris Norgren. Chris is a curator at the San Francisco museum that has been awarded the oversight of The Plundered Past exhibition by the U. S. Defense Department. He's young, bored, and has a less-than-stellar degree in art history from San Jose State.
When the chief curator (and Chris' immediate supervisor), Peter Van Cortlandt, calls from Berlin requesting help with irregularities, Chris accepts assignment as deputy director of the exhibition and flies to Berlin.
After a brief discussion with Chris regarding a suspicious painting without naming the work in question, Van Cortlandt flies to Frankfurt to acquire an El Greco belonging to Bolzano for the Berlin exhibition. He is found murdered near a Frankfurt brothel.
As Chris tries to solve the mystery with the help of a grungy OSI Major, the reader is deluged with some fascinating facts and glimpses of the art world: such as the difficult procedures of mounting an exhibition and the steps of investigating a suspected forgery.
We follow Chris into the golden world of Florentine Cinquecento, discover methods of verification and authenticity of art, learn the vernacular--craquelure, pointelle, etc.
And we marvel at the architecture of Germany and Italy, have lunch at the Berlin Zoo and gourmet breakfast at a small hotel in Florence.
Elkins is the Edgar award-winning author of the Gideon Oliver novels. A DECEPTIVE CLARITY is the first of a trilogy of Chris Norgren art history mysteries. Published in 1987, it may have been before its time with the combination of mystery and art, but a current reading is highly recommended.
4 out of 5 stars