Opening of the Bastion 1966 (≈ 1966)
First Cocteau Museum in Menton.
27 juin 2005
Donation Séverin Wunderman
Donation Séverin Wunderman 27 juin 2005 (≈ 2005)
1,800 works given to Menton under conditions.
novembre 2011
Opening of the museum
Opening of the museum novembre 2011 (≈ 2011)
Opening of the building designed by Ricciotti.
29 octobre 2018
Storm Flood Adrian
Storm Flood Adrian 29 octobre 2018 (≈ 2018)
60% of damaged works, closing.
juillet 2025
Summation of refund
Summation of refund juillet 2025 (≈ 2025)
Wunderman Foundation seeks unexposed works.
mai 2025
Delayed reopening announcement
Delayed reopening announcement mai 2025 (≈ 2025)
Planned after 2030 despite restorations.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Jean Cocteau - Multipurpose Artist
Author of the works exhibited, strong link with Menton.
Séverin Wunderman - Collector and donor
Offered 1,800 works to the city in 2005.
Rudy Ricciotti - Museum architect
Manufacturer of the building inaugurated in 2011.
Honoré II - Prince of Monaco
Sponsor of the Bastion in 1619.
Origin and history
The Jean-Cocteau Museum, Séverin-Wunderman collection, is a municipal museum in Menton dedicated to the work of Jean Cocteau, mainly from the donation of Séverin Wunderman. Inaugurated in November 2011, it houses more than 1,800 works, including a thousand of Cocteau, making it the largest public worldwide collection of the artist. The building, designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti, is distinguished by its fragmented facade evoking the many facets of the artist.
The donation of Séverin Wunderman, an American collector of Belgian origin born in 1938, was formalized on 27 June 2005. It included 1,800 pieces: drawings, photographs, manuscripts, prints, posters, illustrated books, ceramics, and sculptures. Wunderman chose Menton because of the privileged link between the city and Cocteau, notably after Cocteau decorated the wedding hall of the City Hall (1956-1958) and rehabilitated the Bastion, a 17th century fort transformed into a museum in 1966.
On October 29, 2018, storm Adrian caused a catastrophic flood: 7-metre waves submerged the museum, damaging 60% of the works. Since then, the museum has been closed, and although 90% of the rooms have been restored by 2025, its reopening is not expected until 2030. In July 2025, the Wunderman Foundation ordered the city to return the works, considering that the conditions of the donation had not been respected.
The Bastion, a historical museum dedicated to Cocteau since 1966, now hosts temporary exhibitions including works from the Wunderman collection. This fort, built under Honoré II of Monaco in 1619 to defend the Bay of Menton, was built by Cocteau himself before his death in 1963. It houses Mediterranean works by the poet, such as pastels, ceramics, and the Innamorati series.
The Wunderman collection is not limited to Cocteau: it also includes works by its artistic entourage, as well as a collection dedicated to Sarah Bernhardt, an actress admired by Cocteau. The pieces given to Menton cover all periods of his career, from self-portraits of the 1910s to monumental projects of the 1960s, offering a complete panorama of his polymorphic art.
The Ricciotti Museum, with a surface area of 2,700 m2, required 3,700 m3 of concrete for its construction. Its triangular shape and fragmented façade symbolize the diversity of the Coctalian work. Despite the climatic and legal hazards, Menton remains a key place to understand Jean Cocteau's legacy, between architectural modernity and Mediterranean historical heritage.
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