Frederic Malle’s Editions De Parfums: Vision By Design + “Une Fleur de Malle Une Rose” Sample Draw

Photo  credit: Octavian Coifan http://1000fragrances.blogspot.com/

Prologue: Today marks the relaunch of www.fredericmalle.com. Thank you Tim Girvin for this article on the visionary who created the "idea of authorship for perfumers that is just now hitting the mainstream market!!! (As a curator of www.ahalife.com I helped bring the Malle diffusers to a wider audience) -Michelyn Camen EIC

 

 

 www.fragrantica.com

There is an emergent strain — a marketing movement — that speaks to the spirit of the celebrity of perfume, the designers of the architecture of fragrance. A recent notation in Forbes, by Hannah Elliott, “The Nose Knows” opens with the declaration of Yann Vasnier,  (who was first interviewed by Michelyn Camen on Fragrantica) and his exudation of French cool, “A taciturn Breton partial to Givenchy suits and vacations in St. Martin, he frequents such à la mode nightspots as Manhattan’s Boom Boom Room and Parisian cult favorite Derrière.”

 

Still, this tradition of building some of the most profitable attributes of brand offerings are oftentimes shadowy and mysterious to the mainstream consumer, but not to perfumistas. It’s rare, even, for brands to announce who designed their fragrances. But that is changing — there is a distinct and long running art to the assembly of the notes of inspiration in the building of a scented masterpiece. Like the architect of a structure — there is an entrance, a walking in, a scent of the larger “place” — and then, as the day turns, textural notes and light, turn the house to another sense of transition and illumination. The scent stays, flows out into the heat of the body and the movement of time — the scent fills out, the day moves on, and the poetry diminishes into memory. Perfume, like architecture, has staying power — but it, too, shall dissolve.

 

This idea of building brands on the legacy of scent designers — their especial skill — is something that is epitomized in the strategies of Frédéric Malle.  (and precedes the glossies and yes even many bloggers) But the real character of Malle’s work relates more to his holistic thinking about design — designation of scent as a curated strategy of business building. As a designer, studying Malle, the observer has to sense that the spirit of designed thinking needs to be the underpinning for everything that he does. It’s this compositing that I find the most celebrated in the holistic sense of the Malle collections. Malle, as a designer of thinking tactics in telling fragrance stories has gathered this sequencing, referenced in this collection .

 

Frederic Malle fragrances were made in collaboration with perfumers  such as Jean-Claude Ellena, Dominique Ropion, Maurice Roucel, Olivia Giacobetti, Pierre Bourdon, Edmond Roudnitska, Ralf Schwieger, Edouard Flechier, Michel Roudnitska and But in each, the supreme art director, architectural commentator, editorial expert was Frédéric Malle — who has not only envisioned the sequencing of his evolving collection, but as well, the artists of their design.

 

 

  

This is just the beginning, in speaking with Margaret Magnuson, an enthusiastic and articulate sales colleague at Malle’s Madison Avenue shop — he’s expanded his line and offerings continuously and more can be found here at his site.

 

The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

In contemplating the nature of design, in place-making, and the nature of experience development, Malle’s strategies of aligning his brand sensibilities are perhaps unrivaled. His modeling, aside from the earlier allegory of fragrance and the architectural design of “the place of perfume” has an editorial cant — he notes, at the site, ““When I came up with the term ‘Editeur de Parfums’ ten years ago I was determined to liberate perfumers from the kinds of restraints often imposed by marketers and focus groups.
I work as an editor works with writers. I give these ‘fragrance authors’ complete freedom to explore and express their ideas. Each perfumer is free to use the most innovative technologies and the rarest raw materials the industry offers. This freedom drives the artist to construct a scent without conventional boundaries and to refine his or her idea and formula to the most precise detail. When it is achieved, I publish it at “Editions de Parfums Frédéric Malle.”

 

Malle’s spirit — the quality of his thinking and contemplations of a new modeling for editorial design of books of scent might be evinced in the exposures of his childhood — which venture to both the side of perfume, as well as the artful and literary, as his site notes — “raised amongst the stylish and intellectual Parisian society of the 60s and 70s, Frédéric Malle” later gathered influential experiences and “further dimension to his understanding of aesthetics, architecture, and modern design by undertaking an Art History degree from New York University and the Sotheby’s Works of Art Course.” But it was his youth in Paris that perhaps defined channeled course to envisioning scent, it was in the family — Malle’s maternal grandfather was the beginning — “Serge Heftler, founded Christian Dior Parfums, where he promoted a sense of chic with the opulent Miss Dior and the minimalist Diorissimo. Frédéric Malle’s mother also worked in the industry. She was the Art Director of Christian Dior Parfums where she collaborated with perfumer Edmond Roudnitska, on the ultramodern Eau Sauvage. Later in 1985, she was instrumental in the creation of Poison with perfumer Edouard Fléchier.” From the age of five Frédéric Malle accompanied his mother on Thursday afternoons to her office at the Dior factory where he was exposed to the production of perfume. From these early awakenings, he saw the creative direction from start to finish. The story continues.

 

His experiences and explorations – and relatively classical fragrance training led to the foundational principles of his retail development. In an interview, to the nature of his collaborative vision, his curation of masters performing masterworks, belies a kind of modesty.

 

The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

“I work for the guys on that wall; they don’t work for me,” pointing to a constellation of black-and-white portraits hanging over the mantel. According to Michael Slenske, “the photos put a face and name to 11 of the greatest perfumers in history — from Jean-Claude Ellena (now the in-house nose for Hermès) to the late godfather of modern fragrance Edmond Roudnitska — nine of whom helped Malle launch his industry-changing brand, Editions de Parfums.”

 

To the links of design, and place making, the alignment is perhaps exemplified in Malle’s strategies of his salons. Designing environments for perfume is complex — being born on the movement of air, the very nature of their presentation is vaporous — scent on scent, it can become indistinguishable to any visitor. Malle’s designed his environments to be receptacles of experience — there are smelling stations, futuristically designed tubular stations, with beautifully executed details, to allow for the careful consideration of fragrances. And it is in the design and disposition of these elements that Malle invested his financial resources — as well as the integrity of the materials of his products. Malle references that “he certainly didn’t have the unlimited budgets for multinational ad campaigns and A-list celebrities like the fashion houses did. So he leveraged the one asset he had in spades: unrivaled connections.”

 

“Connections are huge,” Malle admits in an article in American Way. “All of these people are my friends. Most of them come from the same lab. The idea for Editions de Parfums came from me, yes, but it also came from all these perfumers telling me they were bored of doing the same thing over and over and over again.”

 

The branded concept, Nouvelles Éditions de Films, also had a familial legacy — the production company created by his uncle, the award-winning director Louis Malle. And that inspiration was simple but profound: “Allow perfumers to approach their creations as if they were writing a novel or crafting a piece of art, with Editions serving as the publishing house/gallery. Money would be no object: They’d work with only the finest raw materials, and they wouldn’t stop until real art was achieved.”

 

My firsthand contact in fragrance design experiences in Paris was at Creative Fragrances, and the offices of Pierre Bourdon, who had created the iconic Cool Water for Davidoff. It might be said that the marine waft — that scent notation — was innovated by Bourdon’s scenting genius, a legacy of expertise, like Malle, who also worked at Roure in the ’80s. “Malle gave him one caveat. ‘I said, ‘Let’s find a way not to be copied. The people who others copy go cheap.’  ”

 

The opening offering was the butter-like, musky, modernist floral aldehydic named Iris Poudre. Malle says this perfume “set a precedent for all the perfumers who work for me.” Malle birthed the fragrance at the opening of his perfume boutique on Paris’ Rue de Grenelle on June 6, 2000, along with eight other highly crafted and edited unisexual fragrances. The revolution begins.

 

The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

To examine the idea of scent design and architecture, beyond the earlier allegory of the patterning of perfume, there are expressions in Malle’s design strategy that are worth studying. Presently, Malle has three stores in Paris, a new space (where these images are from, shot several months back) on Madison Avenue in New York that opened last October to rabid commentary, and has expanded with more than 50 miniaturized shop in shop versions around the globe in premium department stores. These include Liberty of London, Holt Renfrew and Barneys New York, which maintains an exclusive U.S. Editions since 2002 — with new mini stores in each of its locations echoing Malle’s boutiques, fitted out with photography of the master noses, color and material treatments, scenting chambers and Bauhaus furniture.

 

The visual story unfolds:

 

The patented scenting chambers
The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

Refrigerated fragrance cabinetry
The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

Artifacts and bottled sampling with vented substrate
The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

Scented lotions
The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

Glassed candles (for scent containment and sampling)
The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

Editions overview and booklet
The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

Boxed candle presentations
The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

Perfume dispersion design boxes
The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

Soaps
The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place

 

Signing treatments
The Design of Parfum | The Art Direction of Place
(Photography | Girvin)

 

The idea of scent – the gaseous, the mysterious, the molecular, the wafting – designing a portfolio space for this experience, it’s something newly disciplined in the spirit of Malle’s visioning. He combines a sophisticated Bauhaus influence with a kind of technical, scientific romance — gadgets and wonderment — stirred in asian touches, artful collections and the acknowledgment of his stars belies a holistic brand that is like no other.

 

To build a brand that is spiritually “un-copyable” might be staked as the premise — and the power — for his storied vision and efforts so far…

Guest Contributor: Tim Girvin

tim | Madison Avenue, off 72nd — NYC

 

GIRVIN‘S EXPLORATIONS ON SCENT DESIGN:
The cloud and experience | http://bit.ly/fqHmEd

 

To be eligible for carded Editions de Parfums Frederic Malle Une Rose  2ml sample, tell us what is your favorite Frederic Malle fragrance is and why it is important to give perfuemrs credit for their fragrances! Draw ends June 17, 2011

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20 comments

  • My favorite is Lipstick Rose. It brings back some powerful memories! Perfume is an art. I think the perfumer should be credited just like any other artist.

  • Lys Méditerranée is my current fav! and I think perfumers, as the artists, should get credit much in the way that I think poets should get compensation when they read out! At poetry readings, the poets bring their art and with it fill coffee houses, cafes, clubs, and bookstores…yet so often the poets leave with little but a ‘thanks’ and sometimes not even that! To the artist!

  • Perfumers are artists and deserve to be credited with their “masterpieces”.

    I like this line: To Quote

    To build a brand that is spiritually “un-copyable” might be staked as the premise — and the power — for his storied vision and efforts so far…

    Guest Contributor: Tim Girvin

  • Please enter me! I’ve not yet had the pleasure to try any Frederic Malle so I can’t give a favorite. It’s so important to give credit to the perfumer as fragrances aren’t just the name that’s slapped on them. They are creations, and they and their creators should be revered as such.

  • I think this is a very wonderful and enlightening article. After reading, I said to myself, Of Course! Mr. Malle is very brilliant and dedicated, especially to his fragrance artists. They most certainly are artists! I, myself, am becoming more and more aware of the individuals and processes that make me feel so beautiful and special.

  • Carnal Flower of course – as a tuberose fan ;-). Credit for fragrances should be given since these are often (but not always) the works of the art. Thanks!

  • I don’t want to be entered into this draw, I just want to say that I admire the idea of giving credits to artists who created those masterpieces.

  • I’ve tried only Carnal Flower, Musc Ravageur and Portrait of a Lady. But Carnal Flower stands out for me although I’m not a huge tuberose fan. He managed to blend it perfectly.
    I really think credits must be given to the creator because without them we wouldn’t have had perumes at all. It is the same with books or pictures.

  • Musc Ravageur is my favorite so far, but I would love the chance for a new favorite. I agree the perfume is an art, and the creator must be credited with his or her masterpieces.

  • I love quite a few, but Parfum de Therese holds a special place in my collection. It is unusual and beautiful. I’m never without it. It was, also, one of my first “niche” fragrances.

  • Alexander Rachev says:

    The only scent I’ve tryed is Musc Ravageur.It was not my cup of coffe, but I get very excited about their creativity and the most original ways to present a whole concept with their work.I realy appreciate the idea of working with different artits the most expiriensed noses and to present their different ideas and skills.This all helps the brand moving in the right directions.I’m not familiar with Une rose but I would love to try it.

  • I really like Bois D’Orage!
    The perfumers should be recognised for their work as they are the ones who put their heart and soul into a creation and also the ones who have devoted their life to their art, studying and practicing for many years before they get to this sort of level. They deserve recognition, if not idol worship, just as other artists do.

  • every perfume is a piece of art, and i am always curious who created it. Malle started a great trend! i have a few favorites among FM line, current one being En Passant… oh wait.. Carnal Flower… or maybe Angeliquies Sous la Pluie, being all so different yet irresistible!

  • Noir Epices is my favorite, the iciest spice perfume in existence. It’s like watching a roaring fire from outside the house in a snowstorm….I think Malle deserves a lion’s share of the credit for bringing perfume authorship out of the dark closets of the corporations that employ them. Bravo!

  • No need to enter me in the draw, but I echo the thoughts of the others who say that perfumers are artists and when their contributions are known it makes for a whole new level of appreciation from a connoisseur part and a whole new level of decision from the artists’ part. Which bottle/brand do you want to put your name on as an artist?

    Wow, thanks for the eye candy. I’ve just smelled some perfumes and candles from F. Malle at Barney’s and these photos bring lovely scented memories back.

  • Michellle Hunt says:

    Lys Méditerranée is a favorite for its unique memorable lily signature. Though I admit I’m overdue to test the other offerings!

    I think it is important to five perfumers credit as any artist deserves credit for their art. And I think the modern consumer likes to have a signature to their purchase….to have a sense of it being made by an artisan, not simply the creation of a boardroom.

  • I’ve only tried one Frederic Malle scent, and it is Carnal Flower. Wow, what a glorious, exhilerating scent!

    Yes, perfumers should receive credit for their works. They’re authors.

  • Tim, I love the pictures (I have this perfume sample already, so don’t enter me!). For those of us who don’t get to go to the real perfume stores because of where we live, it’s a real treat to see images like these! And who doesn’t love the aesthetic of Malle?? Brilliant!