Amedeo Modigliani - Portrait of Jean Cocteau 1917

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Amedeo Modigliani - Portrait of Jean Cocteau 1917

Portrait of Jean Cocteau 1917
100x81cm oil/canvas
The Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation
The image is only being used for informational and educational purposes

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From The Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation:
In the spring of 1916, Pablo Picasso brought the poet Jean Cocteau to meet the artists and poets who habitually gathered at Moïse Kisling’s Montparnasse studio. The Right Bank poet apparently irritated the group of Left Bank friends with his pretentions: the poet Pierre Reverdy recounted later that Cocteau talked incessantly, his voice like the rain beating on the roof, while everyone ignored him.
Both Modigliani and Kisling painted Cocteau, and Modigliani’s devastating portrait captures the poet’s vanity. Cocteau paid for the portrait by Modigliani, but, claiming that it would not fit in a taxi, left it behind and never sent for it. At this time in his life, Cocteau was proud of his long, straight nose, which is shown here with a bump, so his pride may have been wounded. Cocteau later wrote, "It does not look like me, but it does look like Modigliani, which is better."