Process-Based Technical Evidence for a Rotationally Constructed Cubist Painting Associated with Pablo Picasso
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This study uses a process-based technical approach combining X-ray radiography, visible and raking-light examination, and cross-modal image comparison to assess the construction logic of a Cubist-period painting associated with Pablo Picasso. Across the X-ray dataset, the painting shows orientation-dependent structural coherence, hierarchically organized planning seams with mechanically sensible terminations, and a multistage base-layer construction that remains interpretable under grayscale inversion and rotation. Visible and raking-light images reveal physically incised inscriptions, names, places, and numerals with later paint settling into grooves and, in some areas, bridging over them, establishing a clear sequence in which inscriptions precede overpainting. Reduced color and polarity-inversion checks confirm that these features are carried by luminance and surface relief rather than color artifacts. Together, these converging lines of evidence support an interpretation of a multi-campaign, orientation-aware construction process consistent with documented working methods from Picasso’s relevant period and difficult to replicate by superficial imitation.