B.A. Shapiro, photo by Lynn Wayne |
B.A. Shapiro is the author of the new novel The Collector's Apprentice. Her other novels include The Art Forger and The Muralist. She has taught sociology at Tufts University and creative writing at Northeastern University, and she lives in Boston and Florida.
Q: You write that the characters in The Collector's
Apprentice were "loosely inspired by the lives of the art collector Albert
Barnes and his assistant, Violette de Mazia." What first interested in you
in them, and why did you decide to focus this novel around versions of them?
A: I visited the Barnes Foundation (Albert Barnes’s art
museum outside of Philadelphia) in my 20s and was completely taken by the
post-Impressionist artwork and the story of his brilliance and eccentricities
as well as the mysteries surrounding Violette de Mazia.
This interest only grew as a fight ensued between the Barnes
and the city of Philadelphia, which tried—and ultimately succeed—to move his
collection from the suburbs into the city against his preferences clearly
outlined in his will.
Q: What kind of research did you do to write this novel, and
did you learn anything especially surprising?
A: I did all kinds of research including interviews, site
visits, extensive reading and museum visiting, etc., and became even more
fascinated with both the characters and the artwork. One surprising thing was
that even an ironclad will can be broken with enough time and political
pressure.
Q: The artist Henri Matisse plays a big role in the
novel. Why did you choose to focus on him in the book?
A: Henri Matisse may be my favorite artist of all times. I
just love his colorful and bold works. I wanted to know more about him and
making him a major character gave me that opportunity.
Q: You tell the story from two characters' perspectives. Was
that your plan from the start, and did you know how the novel would end before
you started writing it?
A: When I started the book I thought there would be two
points of view: Vivienne Gregsby (Violette) and Edwin Bradley (Albert Barnes).
Edwin’s POV didn’t pan out and as Vivienne’s grew, I realized I need a strong
antagonist who was worthy of her.
That’s where George—I love him and hate him—came in,
including all his cons and her counter-cons.
I knew how the novel was going to end when I began, but it
didn’t turn out that way. Almost never does.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I’m working on a novel that is completely different from
anything I’ve ever written before—and very different from my latest trilogy of
art/mystery/history novels.
This one takes place in the present day, has seven viewpoint
characters who are linked through the self-storage units they rent in a
medieval-style building in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
They are rich, poor and in-between, they are black, white
and brown, they are Christian, Jewish and Muslim, and they would never have
come in contact with each other without the randomness of their storage
units—and the secrets and mysteries that ultimately draw them into each other’s
lives.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with B.A. Shapiro.
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