Outgoing French President Francois Hollande has posed for a bizarre set of photographs as he prepares to hand power to Emmanuel Macron.

Portraits of the 62-year-old were captured both in colour and black and white during a photo shoot at the the Elysee Palace in Paris.

Hollande, who has yet to decide what to do after he leaves office on Sunday, is shown resting his head on his hand in one photo while in others he removes his glasses and closes his eyes.

Outgoing French President Francois Hollande has posed for a bizarre set of photographs as he prepares to hand power to Emmanuel Macron

Hollande, who has yet to decide what to do after he leaves office on Sunday, removes his glasses and closes his eyes in one bizarre picture

Portraits of the 62-year-old were captured both in colour and black and white during a photo shoot at the the Elysee Palace in Paris

Hollande is shown resting his head on his hand in one picture. The bizarre photo shoot came days before he is due to hand power to Emmanuel Macron

Another image shows the suited politician standing and running his hand through his hair.

Hollande became the first French president in recent history to not seek a second term of office having been in the position for the last five years.

This week, he chaired his final cabinet meeting before handing over the reins to Emmanuel Macron, while the governing Socialist Party began to splinter.

Macron will be inaugurated on Sunday and the centrist's victory over far-right leader Marine Le Pen is threatening to rapidly re-draw the French political map.

After embracing each member of his government as they left the Elysee Palace for the final time, Hollande said he had not decided what to do after he leaves office.

'How can I be of use to my country? That is the question I am going to try to answer now by mulling over it,' he said.

Hollande chaired his final cabinet meeting this week before handing over the reins to Emmanuel Macron, while the governing Socialist Party began to splinter

Hollande removed his glasses for some of the shots, which were captured at the Elysee Palace in Paris

Hollande became the first French president in recent history to say he would not seek a second term of office having been in the position for the last five years

The bruising election contest left the traditional parties on the sidelines, and Hollande's ruling Socialist Party is in disarray after the two-round election.

After former prime minister Manuel Valls shocked the party by saying it was 'dead' and he wanted to be a parliamentary candidate for Macron's year-old 'Republique en Marche' (Republic on the Move) movement, another leading Socialist struck out on Wednesday.

Benoit Hamon, who as the Socialist presidential candidate finished fifth in the first round of the election, said he planned to launch a new leftwing movement.

Hamon vowed to 'rebuild the left' with a new 'broad-based movement', while saying he intended to remain a member of the Socialist Party.

Leftwinger Hamon beat centrist Valls to secure the Socialist nomination for the election after an ideological battle within the party.

But he won just 6.4 percent of the first-round presidential vote on April 23 after being overshadowed by Communist-backed firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon.

Hamon said his movement would be launched on July 1, after legislative elections in June that will be crucial to Macron's ability to pursue his agenda.

Hollande posed for pictures at Elysee Palace as the clock ran down on his time as French President

A poll in December predicted Mr Hollande would win just seven per cent of votes if he stood in the first round of the election. In the end, he decided he would not seek a second term of office

Macron, 39, has promised to rejuvenate France's jaded governing class by bringing more people into parliament who, like him, have never held elected office.

The incoming president has said half of Republique en Marche's candidates for the 577 seats up for grabs in the June 11-18 elections to the National Assembly will be new to politics.

The rest will be from the centrist Modem party or rebels from the Socialists and rightwing Republicans - and he will likely need to form a coalition to govern.

The candidates will be announced on Thursday but Macron's movement said Wednesday that Valls had 'not yet' fulfilled the criteria.

The ramifications of Macron's victory are also being felt in Le Pen's National Front (FN), following the announcement that her influential niece Marion Marechal-Le Pen is quitting politics - for now.

Marechal-Le Pen, 27, who has been tipped as a future leader of the party, told a regional newspaper in southern France she would resign her parliamentary seat because she wanted to work in the private sector and spend more time with her two-year-old daughter.

Behind her decision though is a battle for the far-right party's future between the more socially progressive wing led by her aunt and the more Catholic, conservative branch based in the south of France represented by Marechal-Le Pen.

Mr Hollande came to office in 2012 promising to be a 'Mr Normal' after five years of rule by the flamboyant Nicolas Sarkozy, who married supermodel Carla Bruni in office, and was seen as a friend of the super rich

Hollande sat down and placed his hands on his legs for one picture in the photo shoot

She was openly critical of Marine Le Pen's score of 33.9 percent against Macron, reflecting the opinion of many critics of her aunt that any score below 40 percent was a failure.

Marine Le Pen, a mother of three, tweeted that 'as a political leader I deeply regret Marion's decision but, alas, as a mum, I understand it'.

The conservative Republicans party, whose candidate Francois Fillon crashed out in the first round of the presidential election after being charged over giving his wife allegedly 'fake' jobs on the public payroll, are aiming to become the majority party in parliament.

That would force Macron to share power with them in what is known as a 'cohabitation' in France.

A poll showed that only 52 percent of voters want a pro-Macron government to emerge from the elections, while 42 percent favoured a legislature that would be a check on the new leader.

Optimism seemed muted too, with 55 percent of respondents to the Elabe survey saying they thought Macron would 'not improve things for the French people'.

Macron meanwhile was mobbed by wellwishers after he took part in a ceremony in the Jardin du Luxembourg in Paris with Hollande to commemorate the abolition of slavery.