Real client case reviewed by ConfirmArt for Toros y Toreros, attributed or related to Pablo Picasso. The public page presents selected visual evidence and a rendered report viewer without exposing the private commissioned PDF.
Pablo Picasso authentication evidence image 1: Toros y TorerosPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 2: Toros y TorerosPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 3: Toros y TorerosPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 4: Toros y TorerosPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 5: Toros y TorerosPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 6: Toros y TorerosPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 7: Toros y TorerosPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 8: Toros y Toreros
Report structure
Section summaries
01
Artwork Description
The piece presented for analysis is a watercolor on cardboard painting depicting a bucolic scene characterized by its pastoral simplicity and dynamic motion. The artwork, measuring modestly, showcases the agrarian lifestyle, featuring cattle and figures that appear to be engaged in traditional farming activities. The central focus of the painting is a bull, rendered with robust brushstrokes that convey both the animal's strength and the fluidity characteristic of watercolor mediums.
02
Back Side and Condition
The reverse side of the watercolor on cardboard reveals several labels and inscriptions that offer insights into the artwork's history and provenance: Galerie Beyeler Label: A label from Galerie Beyeler in Basel lists the inventory number "18658" and attributes the artwork to "Pablo Picasso," with dimensions noted as "23 x 15 cm." It also references "AV Vol. 65 SA," which could indicate a catalog or exhibition volume and item number, suggesting the piece was once part of a curated collection or exhibition. Weintrau
03
Comparative Analysis with "Toros y Toreros"
The series "Toros y Toreros" presents a distinctive style that reflects Pablo Picasso's fascination with the bullfight, a theme recurrent in his work, embodying both the cultural spirit of Spain and a personal iconography. Authentic watercolors from this series are characterized by their vigorous brushstrokes and dynamic interplay of light and dark, capturing the movement and drama of the bullring. In comparison to the artwork in question, the authentic pieces within "Toros y Toreros" exhibit a level of spontaneity
04
Authenticity Concerns
Upon critical examination, several aspects of the A1 watercolor signal departures from Pablo Picasso's distinctive style, particularly when compared to his "Toros y Toreros" series. These disparities are significant in evaluating the authenticity of the artwork. Firstly, the rendering of depth diverges notably from Picasso's adept use of space.
05
Signature Verification
The signature found on the artwork A1, depicted in Figure , is subjected to meticulous scrutiny. An immediate observation reveals that the signature fails to correspond with the known characteristics of Picasso's authentic signature. Close-up of the signature on artwork A1.
Signature evidence
Signature analysis reference tables
Signature VerificationThe signature found on the artwork A1, depicted in Figure , is subjected to meticulous scrutiny. An immediate observation reveals that the signature fails to correspond with the known characteristics of Picasso's authentic signature.
Authentication evidence
Selected close details from the human review
Back Side and ConditionThe reverse side of the watercolor on cardboard reveals several labels and inscriptions that offer insights into the artwork's history and provenance: Galerie Beyeler Label: A label from Galerie Beyeler in Basel lists the inventory number "18658" and attributes the artwork to "Pablo Picasso," with dimensions noted as "23 x 15 cm." It also references "AV Vol. 65 SA," which couldComparative Analysis with "Toros y Toreros"The series "Toros y Toreros" presents a distinctive style that reflects Pablo Picasso's fascination with the bullfight, a theme recurrent in his work, embodying both the cultural spirit of Spain and a personal iconography. Authentic watercolors from this series are characterized by their vigorous brushstrokes and dynamic interplay of light and dark, capturing the movement and dAuthenticity ConcernsUpon critical examination, several aspects of the A1 watercolor signal departures from Pablo Picasso's distinctive style, particularly when compared to his "Toros y Toreros" series. These disparities are significant in evaluating the authenticity of the artwork.
Private authentication
Submit your artwork for a ConfirmArt review
Use this real case as a reference for the kind of evidence that can be organized in a private authentication report.
The public browser receives rendered pages, not a native PDF viewer or direct PDF URL. Public pixels can still be screen-captured; private commissioned reports remain controlled client deliverables.
QR verification
Traceable real case
This real case has a stable verification URL and source fingerprints. The QR code resolves to the public verification record for this case.
Only your email and service selection are needed to submit the request. Optional images, dimensions and notes can be added now or later.
Payment is requested only for the Authentication report. Catalogue search, advisory, restoration and local inspection requests are reviewed first so the scope can be confirmed.
Authentication is a human expert review. ConfirmArt may use AI for bounded research support such as database, image, book or provenance searches, but not as a classifier verdict.
Complete front image
Reverse, support, frame and condition details
Signature, inscriptions, labels or seals
Invoices, certificates, provenance or catalogues
Comparative images, references or previous opinions, if available