
| Artist | Jean Cocteau |
| Year | 1956 — published 1975 |
| Printer | Ateliers Mourlot, Paris |
| Publisher | A.C. Mazo, Paris |
| Edition | 150 impressions — signed in the stone |
| Size | 66 × 53 cm (26 × 20.75 in) |
| Type | Original vintage lithograph — Arches paper |
| Condition | A — Overall Good |
This is an original lithograph drawn by Jean Cocteau directly on stone in 1956 — one of the most intimate and technically refined works of his graphic career, printed in six colors at the Ateliers Mourlot in Paris.
The story of this piece is itself remarkable. Cocteau drew Tête de Faune on a lithographic stone in 1956 as part of a series of works intended for various projects that were never realized. The stone was preserved according to the artist's wishes, and the edition was not pulled until 1975 — long after Cocteau's death in 1963 — under the supervision of his estate and his lifelong friend and collaborator Fernand Mourlot himself. It was issued as the frontispiece for the portfolio Jean Cocteau : 25 Lithographies, 1956–1975, published in an edition of only 150 impressions by A.C. Mazo, Paris.
The image — a Faun's head rendered in Cocteau's signature style of fluid, mythological line — carries his characteristic blend of antiquity and modernity, the dreamlike and the precise. The title Hommage à Mourlot is a testament to the profound bond between the artist and the atelier that had been his printmaking home for decades.
Printed on Arches paper, signed in the stone. An edition of only 150 impressions worldwide.
A rare and deeply personal work — at the intersection of Cocteau's poetic universe, the Mourlot legacy, and the golden age of French lithography.