Real client case reviewed by ConfirmArt for The First Kiss, 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: The First KissPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 2: The First KissPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 3: The First KissPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 4: The First KissPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 5: The First KissPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 6: The First KissPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 7: The First KissPablo Picasso authentication evidence image 8: The First Kiss
Report structure
Section summaries
01
Description of the Artwork
A vertically oriented, large rectangular oil painting presents a tightly interlocked group composed of a powerful, taurine male embracing a smaller female , with the head of a horse emerging behind and above the embrace. The scene is compressed into a near full-length, three-quarter view that fills the field from edge to edge. The work is photographed here both in its ornate gilt frame (fig.
02
Supporting Documentary Evidence
Client-supplied documents (overview). The owner provided a two–page titled "CERTIFICATE OF OWNERSHIP AND APPRAISAL" issued under the heading "GLOBAL FINE ART APPRAISAL GROUP" and bearing a circular red stamp and a handwritten signature (see figs. The is formatted in English and dated at the upper right 10/12/25, 5:39 PM .
03
Catalogue Note
The subject is the classical Minotaur and woman in embrace , a leitmotif that occupied Picasso intensely in Boisgeloup in the summer of 1933–1935 and culminated in the celebrated Minotauromachie of 1935. The present composition reprises—almost element by element—the profile arrangement of the Minotaur's massive torso bending over the woman at left, the deep contrapposto with the forward splayed foot, and, crucially, the left–hand "window" that emits a fan of linear rays cutting across the figures. Those structural
04
Inauthenticity Concerns
Working visual aid: line overlay drawn from the 1934 composition, superposed on the present painting ( for study purposes ). Direct compositional derivation from 1934 prints. The present painting reproduces, with near point‐for‐point correspondence, Picasso's Minotaure embrassant une femme of August 1934 (Boisgeloup), documented as: monotype ( OPP.,34 : 080 ), drypoint on Vergé Montval ( OPP.,34 : 081 ), and burin ( OPP.,34 : 338 ); the copper plate is conserved ( OPP.,34 : 208 ).
05
Signature Inconsistencies
Morphology of the surname In authentic mid‑century signatures the first P rises in a long spear before looping back; the c and a tilt slightly right; the double s drops below the baseline. Samples reproduced in J.\ Castagno's Signatures and Monograms of Modern European Artists (Fig. ) show a consistent stroke sequence: each starts with a steep left‑leaning ascender and ends in a tapering final o. Picasso entries in Castagno, Signatures and Monograms of European Artists , vol.\ 1, 1989
06
Signature Inconsistencies
Observed features in the present inscription (fig. The vertical stem and the bowl show a clear second pass of the brush to correct/fortify the first line. This two–pass construction is inconsistent with Picasso's habitual single, calligraphic sweep for the initial P .
Signature evidence
Signature analysis reference tables
Signature InconsistenciesMorphology of the surname In authentic mid‑century signatures the first P rises in a long spear before looping back; the c and a tilt slightly right; the double s drops below the baseline. Samples reproduced in J.\ Castagno's Signatures and Monograms of Modern European Artists (Fig.Signature InconsistenciesObserved features in the present inscription (fig. The vertical stem and the bowl show a clear second pass of the brush to correct/fortify the first line.
Authentication evidence
Selected close details from the human review
Inauthenticity ConcernsWorking visual aid: line overlay drawn from the 1934 composition, superposed on the present painting ( for study purposes ). Direct compositional derivation from 1934 prints.
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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