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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

The illustrator Coco Signs Her New Book - Paris

On the occasion of the publication of her new book "Signed by Coco" (Signe Coco, Les Arenes editions, 2025), cartoonist Coco, a figure at Libération newspaper and Charlie Hebdo, discusses four years of political, social, and international upheaval—from the #MeToo movement to the war in Ukraine, from the climate crisis to women's rights—as well as the place of editorial cartoons in a tense world, where humor and commitment remain acts of resistance. She discusses these issues with Jeremie Peltier, co-director general of the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, in Paris, France, on December 5, 2025. Photo by Lionel Urman/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Celebration Marks 475 Years of Parisian Booksellers - France

Celebration Marks 475 Years of Parisian Booksellers - France

Emmanuel Guibert, illustrator and screenwriter during the celebrations marking 475 years of booksellers (1550-2025), organized from the Pont Neuf bridge in Paris, at the invitation of the Booksellers' Cultural Association on November 14, 2025. Photo by Tomas Stevens/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Celebration Marks 475 Years of Parisian Booksellers - France

Celebration Marks 475 Years of Parisian Booksellers - France

Emmanuel Guibert, illustrator and screenwriter during the celebrations marking 475 years of booksellers (1550-2025), organized from the Pont Neuf bridge in Paris, at the invitation of the Booksellers' Cultural Association on November 14, 2025. Photo by Tomas Stevens/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Celebration Marks 475 Years of Parisian Booksellers - France

Celebration Marks 475 Years of Parisian Booksellers - France

Portrait of Emmanuel Guibert, illustrator and screenwriter during the celebrations marking 475 years of booksellers (1550-2025), organized from the Pont Neuf bridge in Paris, at the invitation of the Booksellers' Cultural Association on November 14, 2025. Photo by Tomas Stevens/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

Menton Refuses to Return Cocteau's Works to The Wunderman Foundation-Museum

In Menton, the Cocteau Museum has been closed since it was flooded in 2018. The Wunderman Foundation, which donated nearly 2,000 works by the poet, painter, and illustrator to the city, feels aggrieved and is demanding their return. The mayor categorically rejects this prospect. Artworks created by French poet, artist and film maker Jean Cocteau are displayed in the new Jean Cocteau Collection at the Severin Wundermann Museum on December 23, 2011 in Menton, France. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, the museum space holds the world’s largest public collection of works by Jean Cocteau, comprising paintings, drawings, pottery, tapestries, jewellery, photographs and audio visual archive, retracing Cocteau’s creative periods all in one place. Photo by Patrick Aventurier/ABACAPRESS.COM

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