MYTHS By The Mediterranean With JEAN COCTEAU

Fauns, fish and other fantasies: a poet's love affair with France's Côte d’Azur

10 Jan 2014

Pebble mosaics by Jean Cocteau outside the Bastion Museum.
Pebble mosaics by Jean Cocteau outside the Bastion Museum.

 

 

I’ve always preferred mythology to history… Mythology is an illusion that becomes reality.
– Jean Cocteau

 

A lover of myths, it is no surprise that master French poet Jean Cocteau (1889-1963) became enamoured with the Mediterranean. Here, by the sea in the south of France, Jean Cocteau imagined himself to live and breathe alongside the figures and tales of Greek mythology, which were to inspire some of his greatest works such as his 1959 film Le Testament d’Orphée. 

Cocteau saw poetry as his lifeblood, propelling him forth to employ multiple vehicles of expression as varied as literature, theatre, drawing, painting, ceramics and film.

 

 

The force of the sea submerging the rocks.

 

 

During one of his southern escapades, Cocteau made his first visit to the town of Menton in the French Riviera in 1955, soon proclaiming Menton to be ‘the pearl of France‘. It is a fitting tribute, then, for the Musée Jean Cocteau to be located here, boasting the largest collection of his artworks. Set along the sea on the Côte d’Azur, the museum was designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti inspired by Cocteau’s life and work.

The latest exhibition presented at the museum entitled Cocteau, Matisse, Picasso, méditerranéens, sees Cocteau’s art conversing with works by his contemporaries Picasso and Matisse, who were also working on the Côte d’Azur in these post-war years.

 

Visit www.museecocteaumenton.fr to find out more.

 

Photography and text by Sophie Pinchetti

 

 

The sun peering through a veil of clouds outside the Bastion Museum in Menton.
The sun peering through a veil of clouds outside the Bastion Museum in Menton.
Another view on the pebble mosaic.
Another view on the pebble mosaic.
The powerful Mediterranean sea.
The powerful Mediterranean sea.
A faun man in Cocteau's pebble mosaic outside the Bastion Museum.
A faun man in Cocteau’s pebble mosaic outside the Bastion Museum.
Jean Cocteau at work. A photograph by Jacques Henri Lartigue.
Jean Cocteau at work. A photograph by Jacques Henri Lartigue.
Pêcheur et jeune fille en train de boire (Fisher and young girl drinking) (1961) A work on paper by Jean Cocteau. 65 cm x 50 cm.
Pêcheur et jeune fille en train de boire (Fisher and young girl drinking) (1961) A work on paper by Jean Cocteau. 65 cm x 50 cm.
Amoureux (Lovers) (1957) A work on paper by Jean Cocteau. 64 cm x 50 cm.
Amoureux (Lovers) (1957) A work on paper by Jean Cocteau. 64 cm x 50 cm.
(Left) Portrait from Lucien Clergue's series on gypsies. (Right) Trial for the poster of the music festival of Menton (1956) A work by Jean Cocteau. Colour Lithograph, 65 x 50 cm.
(Left) Portrait from Lucien Clergue’s series on gypsies. (Right) Trial for the poster of the music festival of Menton (1956) A work by Jean Cocteau. Colour Lithograph, 65 x 50 cm.
Le pêcheur enlaçant la jeune fille (Fisher embracing the young girl) (1961) A work on paper by Jean Cocteau, 65cm x 49 cm.
Le pêcheur enlaçant la jeune fille (Fisher embracing the young girl) (1961) A work on paper by Jean Cocteau, 65cm x 49 cm.
Les Gémeaux (1960) by Jean Cocteau. Ceramic, diameter: 36 cm.
Les Gémeaux (1960) by Jean Cocteau. Ceramic, diameter: 36 cm.
A view on the Musée Jean Cocteau on an unusually dark and cloudy afternoon in Menton. The building was designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti.
A view on the Musée Jean Cocteau on an unusually dark and cloudy afternoon in Menton. The building was designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti.
Faun-men by Jean Cocteau.
Faun-men by Jean Cocteau.
Steel sculptures of Jean Cocteau's profile outside the Musée Jean Cocteau.
Steel sculptures of Jean Cocteau’s profile outside the Musée Jean Cocteau.
The architectural interplay of light and shadow at the Musée Jean Cocteau.
The architectural interplay of light and shadow at the Musée Jean Cocteau.
Homme toro de profil (Profile of a Toro man) (1961) A work on paper by Jean Cocteau. 30 x 21 cm.
Homme toro de profil (Profile of a Toro man) (1961) A work on paper by Jean Cocteau. 30 x 21 cm.
A curious profile appears on this cliff. A woman walking past told me this was The Guardian of the Sea. Perhaps this is one Cocteau's reincarnations into this landscape which he loved so much...
A curious profile appears on this cliff. A woman walking past told me this was The Guardian of the Sea. Perhaps this is one of Cocteau’s reincarnations into this landscape which he loved so much…
 

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