What an exhilarating evening it was on January 31 in Denver. It wasn’t the snowstorm or the bitter cold but the hoards of people who flocked to Denver Art Museum to enjoy the first “Untitled” evening of the 2014 season. And lucky, lucky me; I was there to share in the festivities and better still to present a new work of aroma-art commissioned by the museum for the event (Untitled #63: au naturel) that was a ‘translation in aromatic form’ of a painting in the museum’s permanent collection called “Young Girl with Flowers”, by Eugene Carriere. This isn’t my first project with DAM but it may be the first time that I have been able to present a new work that has never been smelled before as well as to give a talk that is specific to my process as an artist (as opposed to presenting researched designs and speaking about the aromas from a more purely educational standpoint). I have had the pleasure of doing this sort of thing at BMoCA (Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art) but this was my first at DAM and I liked it. I liked it a lot. It was right up my alley, as my grandmother used to say. To invoke the historical content available in a visual work from the late 19th Century and to apply it to an aroma art translation allows me to delve into the concurrent themes in perfume history, materials in use, trends in art, culture and scent as well as to speak directly to the image and what it feels like to view it. To bring all of this to play when designing is for me, instant love. I can feel all of my senses engaged and it is like riding a delicious wave taking you to distant times and places. I can feel myself there smelling the air and sensing the fabrics of the costumes and the bodies of the people around me (and what their skin emanates). It is immersive and complete.
When I first saw “Young Girl with Flowers” I knew that this would be my chosen subject for the perfume. I have been asked many times how I come to find inspiration, or what makes me want to create perfumes and often I have answered that the name and scent come together or there is some sort of sensory stimulation that sends me down the rabbit hole in search of what the perfume story wishes to be. With this perfume, the name came last. I wanted to work purely from the image without a ‘product name’ potentially distracting me.
The image is striking, no? It’s dramatic and rich, but playful and sweetly innocent. I love this girl playing with flowers in her hair (with that shock of red, they would be roses. Or maybe geraniums? Let’s use both). And that porcelain face so light and smooth. Is she playing dress up? Is she the Queen in her own heroic story? Is she working out how to be a woman and how she wishes to be perceived? There are many ways to come to this image and decide what it’s all about. What came for me was to speak to the drama, the sense of light and dark as well as the playful innocence paired together with the woman she will ultimately become. I made this perfume for her to wear. She is the Queen of Flowers.
Anyone who has studied perfume has come across the concept that “jasmine is the King of flowers and rose is the Queen”. The image itself sets up the first impulse to make this perfume with a rose dominant heart. And as geranium comes to mind as well (plus it has so much in common with the chemistry and aromatic signature of rose) it’s a natural pairing. Now the 19th Century influence…yes, it must be a more classical construction and yes, it will contain mostly naturals as this would have been the norm for the time. But, the dawning of synthetics had begun and this perfume must have a modern element. There is youth mixed in this after all. Peach…oh yes, that face speaks to me of peach, but a soft note; it can’t be a juicy, jolly rancher of peach. Aldehyde c-14 can do that soft, fuzzy, creamy note that is that smiling face that comes out of the image and floats on top. The base needs to be dark and rich. The blackness is there and this says that the perfume must rise up and float at places and plunge into depths as it dries down.
What I chose is ultimately an oriental base (balsams, resins, vanilla and civet) but winks at chypre with just a little moss. The effect is something that I personally adore: a rich, luxurious velvet of a dry down that is kept from being too sweet by the balsams and civet but keeps you coming back for one kiss after another with just the right amount of deliciousness.
Rose perfumes are not usually my *thing* to wear for myself. They don’t really smell good on me, with the exception of Rose Vert, which I love. La Reine des Fleurs is the second exception. It unfolds like the opening of the most sensuous flower and seems to last forever on my skin (until the next day). I can’t stop smelling my arms when I am wearing it. In fact it makes me feel like the heroic queen in my own story, too.
********************************
In case you’re interested to read more about the perfumes that I created for DAM and the Passport to Paris exhibit, you can check out the interview I did for their blog. I also created some pared down versions of La Reine des Fleurs with recipes that you can check out on their DIY tumblr. There’s some great shots from the Untitled #63 to check out on flickr , too, in case you’d like to take a peek.
Lastly, I’d love to share by giving away three 3 ml deluxe spray samples of La Reine des Fleurs! Please post a comment and tell me about your favorite roses, rose perfumes and/or 19th Century paintings to enter. The draw will be open through February 25. oxox
image credits: queen of flowers image by svetlana valueva found here; young girl with flowers image was generously allowed by Denver Art Museum.
That sounds absolutely amazing. I’ve been loving Rose de Nuit and Mohur lately, but I am DEFINITELY open to finding another favorite rose perfume! (Also, I hope you’ll put word out about any upcoming public events you have; I’ve been planning a trip your way!)
Hi, Heather! Thank you for sharing your favorite rose perfumes and I will definitely keep you posted about any upcoming public events ( or even Essense Studio events!). I hope that you will come and visit! It would be a pleasure to meet you and smell smells together. 🙂 All my best and good luck in the draw. Best, Dawn
This sounds beautiful Dawn! I love your Rose Vert too. I actually adore rose scents, some of my favorites: Amouage Lyric, Serge Lutens Rose de Nuit, Rosine Secrets de Rose, Guerlain Rose Barbare. This is just the tip of the iceberg. Good luck with the new scent.
Hi, Candice!! 🙂 Thanks for stopping by the blog and sharing your faves. I can totally imagine the long list of rose perfs that you love… you named some really great ones! I wish that rose scents smelled better on me but I so love roses and rose perfumes anyway. I just have to love them from afar… Thank you for the well wishes and good luck in the draw! OXOX, Dawn
La Reine des Fleurs sounds glorious, and I would love to enter your giveaway. Going by your Ligne Trapeze, you have a magical touch with the aldehydes. I’d love to see what you do with a classically-constructed rose aldehyde.
Rose is one of my favorite notes. I even took my fragrantica uname (“drouhin”) from the name of my favorite rose: “Zephirine Drouhin”. After all, a rose by any other name would smell as sweet — and I do!
Favorite perfumes with prominent roses are several of the Carons: Pour une Femme, N’aimez Que Moi, and Parfum Sacre. Also Amouage’s Lyric, MFK’s Lumiere Noire and indie perfumer Sharif Laroche’s Ambergris Taifi Rose and Ambergris Ambre Rose.
Hello, Drouhin~ Thank you for stopping by and commenting! I have not yet smelled a Zephrine Drouhin rose but I will surely hunt one down and maybe, if it will grow here, add one to my small but precious to me, rose garden. Thank you for sharing it! 🙂 And thank you for your kind words for Ligne Trapeze; I love that perfume but not everyone can do that much cool aldehyde. I wish you luck in the draw and I hope to see you again. All my best, Dawn
Dawn, I love your creative process. My favorite 19th century painter is Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones. It’s hard to chose a favorite, but in this case I’ll choose The Heart of the Rose, oil on canvas, 1889.
Thank you for an opportunity to try La Reine des Fleurs! And congratulations on a successful collaboration with the DOM, too!
Hello, Shylotus~ Thank you! 🙂 And thank you for commenting and sharing Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones, The Heart of the Rose. So beautiful! Best of luck in the drawing~ Dawn
Something about the hint of spring coming makes me crave roses, though I’m still looking for my favorite rose scent. This one certainly sounds delicious; I also like Byredo’s Rose Noir and CJ Scents Velvet. “Young Girl with Flowers” reminds me a little of the work of Elisabeth Vigee LeBrun, a French artist of the late 18th- early 19th century. Her portraits are mesmerizing!
Hi, Maggiecat~ Oh, I am not sure that I am familiar with Elisabeth Vigee LeBrun (although she sounds familiar) so I am going to look her up! 🙂 Thank you for sharing her! I wish you good luck in the draw and should you win, I hope to have helped you find a delicious rose perfume! ~ Dawn
Congratulations, Dawn! I would love to attend one of these olfactory exhibitions some day. The painting is very dreamlike, I hear a little lute song along with the visual and scent. I personally love your American Beauty, it has just the right milkiness to make the rose close to the skin. I also liked Beach Roses, but American Beauty is like balm to me. As far as roses, one I love is the soft scent of Golden Wings. We have a wonderful public space called “The Park of Roses” and I especially love the old heritage section. My son and I attend ‘church’ there on Sunday mornings in the summer. Croissants in hand we get some wonderful sniffing in.
Oh, yes, Dorothy, I would love to attend “church” with you and your son, anytime! 🙂 I will have to track down Golden Wings as well. I am looking to add some new roses to my small garden and this one sounds great just by the name. I am so happy to know how you love American Beauty; that makes me smile. Good luck in the draw and thank you so much for your comments. <3, Dawn
I. Desire. To. Smell.
🙂 Ash, come on down and smell some roses! Good luck in the draw and see you soon? Hope so. ox, Dawn
I’m not much of a rose lover either but this sounds like one that may work for me. Thus far, the only rose scents that I enjoy are Providence Perfume Rose Boheme and Tauer PHI Une Rose de Kandahar. I would love to try this…thank you for the draw!
Hi, Stacey! Thank you for your comment. You know, I have heard such lovely things about Andy’s PHI Un Rose de Kandahar but have yet to smell it. ( It’s on my long list of scents I’d love to sniff). Good luck in the draw and if you win, I hope it’s another rose that you will very much enjoy! ~ Dawn
I am a huge Rose perfume fan! Some of my favorites include Tom Ford Noir de Noir, Annick Goutal’s Rose Splendide and Ce Soir Ou Jamais and Rose Absolue, YSL Paris, Tauer’s Une Rose Chypre and Un Rose de Kandahar, and Rose-Oud combos, like Montale’s White Aoud. There are many, many more but those are a few that immediately jump to mind.
I wish I was in Denver to visit this piece and your aromatic translation, everything sounds so beautiful. Thank you so much for the giveaway!
Hello, Devon! Thank you for stopping by and sharing your love of rose scents! You have some of my faves on your list (which I love from afar, alas)… I hope that someday you will have the opportunity to visit us in Boulder and maybe at a time when I’m doing another collection with DAM. Thank you for your kind words and best of luck in the draw! ~ Dawn
oooh! Rose perfumes weren’t my thing either before I smelled Rose Vert, and now I’m crazed to find more that feel like they come from that same amazing universe. In my neighborhood of coastal Maine, wild roses are a pernicious weed and they will eat whole maple trees if you let them, but then they bloom and they smell — oh. so. oh my. So you forgive them, and don’t burn them and salt the ground where they rooted, and leave a few, and they take over again in a week or two. They’re plain pink single petaled little dealies with MASSIVE SERIOUS THORNS (ow ow ow damnit!) and once they bloom they’re done, so their asylum comes from that scent and no other redeeming feature. Worth it.
Hi, Emily!
🙂 Whoa.. I have never heard of such a rose that could overtake a maple tree… fierce! but yes, I know many wild rose scents and they are just so heavenly that you forgive their ferocity and show them love. I seriously need to come to Maine to check this wild rose out, though. Good luck in the draw and thank you for the kind words for Rose Vert. ox, Dawn
Oh my! Roses, always roses! I am very partial to the Damascena and Bulgarian varieties – although my fondest childhood memories are of my mothers rose garden. The Tropicana’s had the most vivid aroma. Even as a child I could discern between the aromas of yellow roses, versus red roses and pink roses and so on. To me roses represent the meaning of life – the richness, the fragility, the strength, the beauty, the full sensory experience. Favorite 19th century artist? Hands down, John William Waterhouse. Love his ethereal imagery and especially his mythic treatment of women with flowers. Favorite paintings are among his “Gather ye Rosebuds While Ye May.” Exquisite. Your new aroma la reine des fleurs sounds absolutely Divine. Can’t wait to try it! : )
Hi, Shirley! Ok, Now there’s three roses varietals I have to smell. Tropicana? Oh yes, I have to smell that. 🙂 I wish you good luck in the draw and I hope that you love La Reine des Fleurs as much as Eau de Trianon! All my best, Dawn
My very favorite rose was a rose I grew up with, a climbing tea rose, a lovely, large, soft pink rose with a sweet traditional scent that scented the whole porch all summer long. I still smell those roses, and the lilacs and the lilies of the valley that grew near them, 40 years later.
My favorite rose painting is “Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose” by J.S. Sargent.I love the combination of the twilight, roses, lilies, and the children. Just lovely.
Oh, how romantic and dreamy, Shelly! Thank you so much for your comment and conjuring up such lovely images and scents! I wish you good luck in the draw~ Dawn
All! roses are my faves! 🙂 lol! I just can`t pick! Thank you for the art you post – it`s how I get my dose of painted beauties 🙂
Hi, Hotlanta Linda! Thank you for stopping by and sharing your love of roses! I’m so glad that you love the art as well — it’s a big part of the fun of sharing on a blog. 🙂 Good luck in the draw and all my best, Dawn
I grow Old Garden Roses for their intense fragrances,Great Maidens Blush being a favorite. I Profumi de Firenze’s Caterine De Medici for its complex bouquet. Thank- you for the drawing. I enjoy your work!
Hi, Peggypat! Oh, now that’s four roses I haven’t smelled but must. And maybe add to my own little garden. I grow Old Roses as well and Maiden’s Blush hasn’t come up yet. ( I love the name!) Good luck in the draw and thank you so much for sharing~ Dawn
Wow, this sounds fabulous! I am a great lover of jasmine, and rose can be lovely, but I often have a hard time wearing it too, though I would love to try this scent! And for the contest: While I have a hard time finding a rose scent that works for me, I am a great lover of the scent of roses, and particularly like the old fashioned, heavily scented roses, the ones that smell almost peppery. There is nothing more magical, to my mind, of the scent of old fashioned roses in a garden, heavy and intoxicating! (ok, jasmine is probably as good, but it’s a different experience!)
And I have to add a bit about 19th century paintings: a lot of my favorite artists and works come a bit later–I’m a huge fan of the modernist movement in art (and literature), but some artists, like Rousseau, have a few that were painted toward the end of the 19th century, like “Tiger in a Tropical Storm (Surprised)!” or “The Sleeping Gypsy,” both of which I love. It can’t really choose a favorite, though–it was a century of really amazing art, and there are a number of vastly different artists from this time period that I love, from Waterhouse to Turner to Klee, and to the big names of the Impressionists, and on and on!
–Lisa
Oh, a woman after my own heart who can’t decide on an artist that is a fave! 🙂 There ARE too many to love! lol. Thank you, Lisa, for sharing your comment and I have to say that I love those peppery, green-resinous beauties, too. I grow a moss-centifolia called “Chapeau de Napoleon” which has the most radiant scent like the one you describe. I LOVE it. I wish you luck in the draw and you know there is some jasmine in La Reine des Fleurs (because there must be some of the King to help out the Queen in a classical construction). Who knows, this may be your rose scent. ~ Dawn
Sounds like you had a great time with this project Dawn! So many possibilities and assembling the facts through your vision- thrilling! My favourite 19th century painting would be (amongst others) Gustave. Caillebotte ‘s L’homme au bain. Rose perfumes were never my thing until I smelled Une Rose Chypree by Andy Tauer and Lyric Men by Amouage- Roses yes but theough a labyrinth of different notes… La Reine des Fleurs sounds as regal as its name! Bravo
Hello, Yash! Oh, yes, I did have a wonderful time creating this new design and conceiving the translation from image to aroma. I hope that “La Reine” will be amongst the deliciously masterful favorite rose scents that you mention. Goodness knows that you have fabulous taste! 🙂 Thank you for the kind words and best of luck in the draw~ Dawn
This sounds wonderful! I’ve been getting more into rose perfumes lately. I love Mohur and 2000 et Une Rose. I have not had the pleasure of trying any of your rose fragrances yet, so this would be a first. I love several of scents, and look forward to trying La Reine des Fleurs. Thanks for the opportunity!
Hi, Holly! Thank you for sharing your faves; Mohur is very beautiful and I have yet to sniff 2000 et Une Rose. I hope that you will enjoy “La Reine” should you win and that it can be a new fave, too. 🙂 Best of luck in the draw~~ Dawn
I’ve worn Un Folie de Rose from Les Parfums de Rosine and also Drole de Rose from L’Artisan Parfumeur. I’m sure your new rose fragrance will be a hit! I love everything you make! I have had the fragrances in both rollerball and spray formulas. 🙂
Hi, Maddie C.~ 🙂 Thank you for the kind words and stopping by the blog to share. I’ve loved both of your fave rose scents from afar… they are truly lovely! 🙂 Good luck in the draw and all my best to you~ Dawn
Has the drawing happened? : )
HI, Shirley! 🙂 Yep. I’m about to post it now. It’s just been such a crazy week that I hadn’t had a moment to let everyone know until tonight. Thank you for stopping by and for the lovely comments at the site, too! I am so happy that you are enjoying Tubereuse so much! ox, Dawn
[…] Century portrayal “Young Girl with Flowers”. The suppose [sic] (which can be noticed during dshnotebook) is both thespian and innocent, worldly and youthful. It evokes a kind of interplay of childish […]