Dr. Rachel
Piers is an expert in restoring art, especially medieval and Renaissance art.
She has left a rather good job in New York City, although “fled” might be the
operative word. She’s left behind problems with a successful museum expansion
and a recent divorce from the man whose firm did the expansion. She’s going to
Rome to work with the Ferrara Museum, and she will be focused on one specific
project -- a triptych in a small church.
The
triptych may turn out to be a work by the Flemish master Rogier Van Der Weyden.
If it is, it will be a huge boost in Rachel’s career, fame for the museum, and
the likely permanent loss of the work for the church.
Rachel
discovers she’s been given a good team: Nigel Thompson, who run the “forensic”
laboratory for art; Pia Amata, a research assistant; and Donati, an expert in
pigment analysis. As they undertake their research, study, cleaning, and
conserving the work, the indications are that it is indeed by Van Der Weyden.
But there are also indications leading to doubt.
Unveiling by Suzanne Wolfe reads almost like an art
history mystery (the mystery novelist Iain Pears comes to mind)
but it’s not. It doesn’t include murders, thrilling suspense, or a heroine
chased through the streets. It does include a museum looking to enhance its
reputation, with much concern for cutting ethical corners, and a corporate
sponsor that wants to enhance reputation as a champion for the arts.
Most of
all, it is a personal story, the story of a woman whose left a wrecked personal
life, who’s tempted to give the museum and the corporate sponsor what they
want, and who finds herself falling in love with a member of her team. It’s a
story about breaching boundaries – ethical, professional, and personal.
Suzanne Wolfe |
Wolfe grew
up in England and read English Literature at Oxford, where she was a founder of
the Oxford C.S. Lewis Society. She and her husband Gregory are the founders of Image Journal. She is the author of The
Confessions of X
(2016) and the co-author of Books
That Build Character: A Guide to Teaching Your Child Moral Values Through
Stories
(1994); Circle
of Grace: Praying with – and for – Your Children (2000); and Bless
This House: Prayers for Families and Children (2004). She is writer in residence
at Seattle Pacific University and lives in Richmond Beach, Washington.
I wanted
more of this story. It’s not a long novel, but I would have been perfectly
happy if it had been. I wanted to know more about the divorce, more about
Rachel’s mother, more about the research trips Pia the assistant makes to
Bruges, and more about the not-quite-villains of the story. Wolf tells a good
story, with deep understanding of the art identification and conservation
process (and it’s fascinating). I was so wrapped up in the story’s characters
that I wanted to know more about them.
Unveiling is a story of art, love, professional
temptation, and what it takes to be successful in the highly politicized world of
arts, museums, and corporate involvement. And it is a well-told story.
Painting: The Crucifixion Triptych,
oil on panel (ca. 1440-1445) by Rogier Van Der Weyden, Museum of Art History,
Vienna.
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