VILLA SANTO SOSPIR

  • Jean Cocteau
  • 14, avenue Jean Cocteau, F-06000 Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, France

Jean Cocteau was born in 1889 near Paris and became one of France's most versatile creative figures, working as a poet, artist, playwright, novelist, and filmmaker.

In 1949, Cocteau was invited by Francine Weisweiller, a wealthy socialite and arts patron, to stay at her summer home, Villa Santo Sospir, on the French Riviera at Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat. Weisweiller had met Cocteau on the set of his film Les Enfants Terribles, and they formed a close friendship. She became his patron and companion for the last fourteen years of his life.

Upon arrival at the pink villa overlooking the Mediterranean, Cocteau asked Weisweiller if he could draw a mural of Apollo above the fireplace. She agreed, and what began as a single mural grew into an extraordinary twelve year project. Cocteau decorated most of the villa's walls, ceilings, and even furniture with murals and mosaics featuring mythological figures, fantastical creatures, and surreal imagery.

As Cocteau recalled, he was imprudent enough to decorate one wall and his friend Henri Matisse said to him: if you decorate one wall of a room, you have to do them all. Taking this advice to heart, Cocteau continued until nearly every surface bore his mark. He invited other artists, including Pablo Picasso, to contribute.

By the time Cocteau left, the house had become infamous as La Villa Tatouée, meaning the tattooed villa. The walls feature fishermen, sailors, mythological gods, and faces of friends rendered in Cocteau's fluid black lines. Even door panels and shutters received his artistic treatment.

Cocteau died in 1963 at age 74, just hours after hearing of Édith Piaf's death. Weisweiller preserved the villa as Cocteau left it and eventually bequeathed it to the town of Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat. The villa is now open to the public for guided tours.