VILLA SANTO SOSPIR
- Jean Cocteau
14, avenue Jean Cocteau, F-06000 Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, France
Jean Cocteau (1889–1963) was a french poet, artist, playwright and filmmaker.

In 1949, Cocteau was invited by Francine Weisweiller, a women Cocteau had met on the set of Les Enfants Terribles, to stay at her home, Villa Santo Sospir, on the French Riviera.

At his arrival, Cocteau asked Weisweiller if he could draw a mural of the Greek god, Apollo, above the fireplace, and over twelve years, Cocteau decorated most of the house in murals and mosaics, and he also invited artists, such as Picasso, to join in.




As Cocteau put it afterwards: “I was imprudent enough to decorate one wall and Matisse said to me, ‘If you decorate one wall of a room, you have to do them all.’” By the time Cocteau left, the house had become infamous as La Villa Tatouée meaning the tattooed villa.
