![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhoUX7MullZ76BqM-H0A5-omE9p5Ffzbj1tEzTayhZzMkfm20DShbFq24LSz_frC4aZ2ypnFRUUNzY86Ws_JCUQnw6Q5qZiMX2-diXQgYnjGfU6bVw0Ev7ENwIomwTVIVjF-fT6/s400/cocteau.jpg)
Jean Cocteau (1889-1963) – poet, writer, playwright, filmmaker and artist – painted this mural in the Notre Dame de France church in London in 1960. The church was bombed in the Second World War and rebuilt in mid-1950s. It's next to the Prince Charles cinema, just off Leicester Square. It took Cocteau about a week to paint, during which time he'd often talk to the figures he was painting. You can just make out, to the left of the rose, a Judas-like figure turning his back to Christ. It's a self-portrait of Cocteau.
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