Portraits through the years
Transcription
Portraits through the years
Portraits through the years 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 1 31/03/08 14:30:03 First, Guerlain breathed new spirit into flowers and brought out the scents of the fields, producing in turn a powder made with lilies, a cream made with roses, a great royal fragrance followed by an imperial one. Then came Fleurs d’Italie, the scents of Belle France preceded Jicky, Muguet or Bon Vieux Temps. After these, Mitsouko, Pour Troubler, Eau de Cédrat, and Mi-Mai made their debut, followed by Candide Effluve. Shalimar which appeared on the scene and reigned supreme over a world seeking new horizons: Sous le Vent, Vol de Nuit. Vetiver, Nahema, Chants d’Arômes, and Chamade revealed their strengths alongside Habit Rouge and proud Samsara. The pursuit of perfume was continued by Coriolan, Derby, and that Instant, a never-ending fresh start, out of reach perhaps, but a divine challenge to immortality. As if to temper this tendency for metaphysics, Guerlain made Insolence its new fragrance, an unexpected violet and iris bouquet, providing a welcome break from the original floral impulse. Jean Orizet President of the Académie Mallarmé 3 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 2-3 31/03/08 14:30:03 GUERLAIN 180 years Pierre-François-Pascal Guerlain Pierre-François-Pascal Guerlain was born on 3 April 1798–21 Germinal Year VI in the French Republican Calendar–to a French family from Picardy, who already had a daughter called Augustine. His father, Louis-François, came from a wealthy Catholic family in the late 18th-century bourgeois tradition. Business was booming, since the pewter pot making and spice trades were in high demand in the new republic, and Louis-François had some impressive professional qualities: he was not afraid of hard work, he was generous by nature and had an upstanding sense of moral rectitude. Po r t r a i t s t h r o u g h t h e ye a r s at the Maison Briard, which manufactured and sold perfumes. This was in 1818–ten years before he opened his own boutique. His job involved demonstrating and selling cosmetic products. He continued his apprenticeship in the companies of Dissey and Piver for several years, during which time he honed his knowledge and expertise. He discovered various fashionable products, often imported from England, and assessed their effectiveness. The numerous trips he made to neighbouring countries not only taught him the importance of exportation, but also the need to honour orders, maintain product quality, even down to the packaging, and meet delivery times. He could not help noticing numerous shortcomings in these areas. Pierre‑François-Pascal, who had inherited values and convictions to which he was to remain deeply attached throughout his life, could not continue dedicating himself indefinitely to products which had been developed and manufactured by others and which were continually experiencing setbacks. He had found his niche in life and was determined to devote himself to it body and soul. Learning the ropes Making a start Pierre-François-Pascal grew up in this strict, hard-working family environment that also taught him the value of courage and perseverance. The boisterous, inquisitive boy found his parents’ strictness hard to endure and he felt smothered by family life. When he turned nineteen, he left the pungent smells of his father’s shop and found employment as a sales assistant 4 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 4-5 At this time, England was going through a period of great economic and industrial growth and English research in the fields of perfume, beauty products and soaps, was setting the benchmark for future European countries. Armed with nothing more than an unshakeable faith in his own abilities and a determination to succeed in a world that he knew was made for him, Pierre-François-Pascal crossed the English Channel and 5 31/03/08 14:30:04 GUERLAIN 180 years spent three years diligently studying medicine and chemistry. He learned botanical secrets, mastered molecules and acquired a thorough grasp of ratios and mixtures. He came back to France a fully-fledged researcher, ready to spread his wings. Spirit of free enterprise In 1828, Pierre-François-Pascal started business as a Parfumeur Vinaigrier, opening a boutique at 42 Rue de Rivoli, on the same site as the Hôtel Meurice. The young entrepreneur’s determination to succeed soon became apparent. He had not chosen this address by accident. The Hôtel Meurice was a great favourite with wealthy English visitors and England spoke very highly of the talents of its perfumers. Pierre‑François-Pascal believed he had to beat his competitors at their own game. His strategy was very simple and well executed. He imported products that were all the rage on the other side of the Channel, such as Gowland’s Lotion or the Royal Extract of Flowers, apparently Queen Victoria’s favourite, as well as soaps and toilet vinegars from leading English companies. At the same time, he opened his own factory at the Barrière de l’Etoile. He worked tirelessly in his laboratory, from which he had a view of the Arc de Triomphe through the narrow window, and his first fragrances resembled his boutique, sophisticated with a hint of Englishness. These included, for the record, perfumed essences for handkerchiefs, such as Extrait de Mélilot, toilet waters, such as Eau de Perles, and imaginative formulas for the rich and powerful, 6 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 6-7 Po r t r a i t s t h r o u g h t h e ye a r s such as Bouquet de la Reine Victoria or Bouquet du Comte d’Orsay, Eaux de Cologne titled Royale or Supérieure, as well as numerous products like soaps, creams and pomades, thermal preparations such as Bain cosmétique au baume de Judée, toilet vinegars and perfume oils for burning, like Pot-pourri de Berlin. Tall, elegant, and highly talented, Pierre-François-Pascal resembled a storybook hero. He was also the living embodiment of certain contradictions and conflicts that were typical of his generation and country: a unique individual who was paradoxically representative of his period. His original and innovative creations introduced a brand-new style of which he was the undisputed master. His boutique became the place to be seen and the Paris chic set fawned upon him–his gamble had paid off! Everyone rushed to buy his subtle fragrances, lotions, pomades and salves that were praised in journals like La Mode and Les Sylfides. Customers fought over tasteful objects like powder compacts or ivory nail buffers. Fortune smiles on the brave, but Pierre-François-Pascal did not let success go to his head, and his next pioneering move was to set up shop at 11, then 15, Rue de la Paix, which was still a poorly cobbled street. Royal commissions flooded in. Pierre‑François‑Pascal became supplier to the Grand Duchesses of Bade and of Württemberg and of Her Majesty the Queen of Belgium. 7 31/03/08 14:30:06 GUERLAIN 180 years Po r t r a i t s t h r o u g h t h e ye a r s On the road Imperial saga In 1842, the leading sales agents in glassware, porcelain, cloth, perfumery products, etc. joined forces to monopolise distribution, mainly in Paris. Pierre-François-Pascal had absolutely no intention of bowing to the demands of these future “giants”. No agreements were signed. He withstood this pressure with great panache, deciding that his products would be exclusively supplied from his Paris boutique (this decision still holds firm some 180 years later). However, this rebellious businessman was also aware of the need to increase distribution outside Paris and in the provinces. Laden with products, his horse‑drawn conveyances visited some fifty towns in France, making deliveries to the authorised agents that he had personally handpicked with the care and attention he was renowned for. The dynamic Guerlain seemed unstoppable. New perfume, make‑up or personal hygiene products appeared at an incredible rate. Pierre-François-Pascal was interested in all fields and his friends moved in scientific or medical circles. His motto, which appeared on the pediment of the factory, became the corporate credo and every employee had to know it and, most importantly, apply it! “Make good products and never compromise on quality. As for the rest, stick to simple ideas and apply them scrupulously.” However, Pierre-François-Pascal was keen to conquer the world. He began with the major European cities: Berlin and Hamburg, Brussels, Liege and Bruges, Vienna, Geneva and Lausanne, Madrid, Cork, Milan, Florence, Amsterdam, The Hague, London, Lisbon, not to mention Warsaw and Krakow, Bucharest, Moscow and Odessa, Calcutta and Pondicherry, New York and Boston. You could buy a “Guerlain” virtually everywhere in the world! All the courts of Europe fought over his creations. He became their official supplier, providing fragrances to Queen Victoria, Queen Isabella of Spain, the unforgettable Sissi, Empress of Austria, as well as the courts of Central Europe and that of Saint Petersburg with Bouquet de Furstemberg and Eau de Cologne Russe. 8 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 8-9 This declaration of faith was passed on from generation to generation. In 1853, Pierre-François-Pascal’s fame reached new heights. Her Majesty Empress Eugénie gave him the title of “His Majesty’s Official Perfumer” after the perfumer created the masterly Eau de Cologne Impériale exclusively for her. On that occasion, Pierre-François-Pascal commissioned his glassmaker, Pochet & du Courval, to produce the emblematic bottle, known as the “bee” bottle. This citrusy cologne was perfectly in keeping with the fragrances of this period. Tasteful simplicity was all the rage at the Imperial court: rose, orange blossom, jasmine. The formula for the Bouquet de l’Impératrice, prepared by Pierre-François-Pascal for Queen Victoria on the occasion of her official visit in 1855, revealed the prevailing mood of the century. The elegant ladies at the Tuileries lost no time in noting that the fragrance contained a “discreditable hint of musk”, as an article in the Messager des Modes put it. Women at the time were supposed to be flowers. 9 31/03/08 14:30:08 GUERLAIN 180 years Until the inspired inventor was succeeded by his son Aimé in 1862, many other fragrances were created and manufactured in the new factory at Colombes, built in 1854. Creator, chemist, perfumer and businessman, Pierre-François Pascal had been able to juggle his talents so that in less than 50 years, he progressed from being a simple Parfumeur Vinaigrier to the owner of a company which was not only famous in France, but also had a wide international network. Due to his innate sense of history he was able to understand his contemporaries and anticipate their requirements. Po r t r a i t s t h r o u g h t h e ye a r s Aimé Guerlain Aimé Guerlain had just turned thirty when he was promoted to the position of Perfumer. His brother, Gabriel, was in charge of corporate development. It was hard for Aimé to assert himself immediately, being the great man’s son, so his first fragrances were a continuation of his father’s work. The latter had initiated him into the art of perfumery and had passed on his love for raw materials, like rose, jasmine, lavender, etc. He knew all their secrets and their limitations and had been taught the mysteries of blending, that enigmatic alchemy that can only be detected by the initiated. Aimé possessed all the knowledge, but had yet to exercise his talent. Very little is known about his early perfumes except that they were a sensory representation of reality. Their beauty lay in their reconciliation of nature and abstract ideas. His fragrances were photographic portraits of flowers. The most famous of them was the Bouquet de l’Exposition, launched at the Universal Exhibition of 1867, where all the wonders of the world were displayed over 40 hectares in the Champ de Mars. Aimé continued the Guerlain tradition of creating fragrances for an evening, a personality or a crowned head: Maréchale Duchesse, Eau de Don Fernando and Imperial Russe in 1879. 10 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 10-11 11 31/03/08 14:30:09 GUERLAIN 180 years Po r t r a i t s t h r o u g h t h e ye a r s Changing times Birth of the first modern perfume As this century drew to a close, attitudes and tastes gradually changed. Artists’ imaginations were fired by the Orient, Asia, and even Africa. With the advent of steamboats, the lure of travelling to different places inspired a tendency for exoticism. This changing climate formed the backdrop against which Aimé was to create his new fragrances. The young creator had already travelled the world. He had accompanied his father on trips to far-off lands to buy the necessary ingredients for his fragrances. He had also studied chemistry in England and could speak the language perfectly. He recognised the importance of travel and was determined to draw his inspiration from other places. Some of his creations, dating from the 1870s, bear witness to this willingness to venture beyond the frontiers of France: United States Perfume, Violette d’Alger, Syringa du Japon, Moskwskaia, Oppobalsam de la Mecque, and Fleur d’Italie, to name but a few. Aimé entered the perfumers’ hall of fame when he created his remarkable, and provocative, fragrance, Jicky, in 1889, the same year as Baron Eiffel erected his scandalous tower. The launch of Jicky corresponded to a crucial chapter in the history of perfumery. At first, women were wary of this radical new perfume and proved reluctant to buy it, so it was worn by men. The fragrance symbolised a shift in attitudes and brought about a change in perfume manufacturing, owing to the use for the first time of synthetic products, without which none of the great perfumes would have been possible. As a result of this harmonious blend of synthetic and natural products, Jicky was regarded, both in Guerlain’s history and the history of perfumery in general, as a link between the 19 th and 20 th centuries. The creation of this perfume hinged on the discovery of “coumarin”, in 1868, by Perkins. Coumarin, which can be isolated from the tonka bean, gave rise to an entire family of fougère fragrances, including Jicky. Additionally, in 1876, Georges de Laire succeeded in making “vanillin”, using a derivative of conifer sap. The mixture of vanillin, coumarin and linalol (extracted from rosewood oil) gave the formula an ultra modern note which ran counter to contemporary views on good taste. The origin of the name has never really adequately been explained. Jicky was the diminutive of the fifteen-year-old Jacques, who had no idea that it was his destiny to create nearly 400 perfumes, including some fragrances that would still be famous 120 years later. Aimé was very fond of his nephew, This period also saw the birth, in literature and in art, of a new approach, a new method of perceiving the natural world. Artists no longer wanted to capture a true likeness: they were more interested in small details, gradual variations in colour, shifting light, the continually changing weather and the march of time. Impressionism no longer wanted to imitate nature, but to transform reality. Aimé was guided by this quest for pure emotion when producing his new perfumes, particularly Jicky. 12 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 12-13 13 31/03/08 14:30:09 GUERLAIN 180 years who was passionate about perfume. However Jicky was also Aimé’s first love. He had met this young English woman when he was studying in London and never forgot her. Po r t r a i t s t h r o u g h t h e ye a r s Jacques Guerlain “Worth is not a question of age for those of noble birth.” Corneille, Le Cid, free translation Gabriel Guerlain’s son, Jacques, was initiated into the art of making perfume when he was barely sixteen. Having grown up surrounded by his family’s fragrances, his future was already mapped out. He spent most of his time at the factory in Colombes where his uncle, Aimé, was in charge of creation. Working alongside him, he learned the basics, which were to make him the greatest, most prolific of perfumers. Following in Aimé’s footsteps, his early creations were in the tradition of his uncle’s fragrances. Little is known about his first perfume in 1890, Ambre, which paved the way for other creations like Dix pétales de roses, Gavotte in 1897, Prince Zurlo in 1898, and Voilà pourquoi j’aimais Rosine which ushered in the new century. Jacques lived only for creation. He made it his personal credo and profession. In the privacy of his laboratory at the factory of 14 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 14-15 15 31/03/08 14:30:14 GUERLAIN 180 years Colombes, he declared war on olfactory conventions and his entire output bore the stamp of his commitment to innovation. “A successful perfume is one whose fragrance corresponds to an initial dream.” Jacques Guerlain A rigorous, harmonious and voluptuous style was born. Mouchoir de Monsieur and Voilette de Madame led the dance in 1904. Initially created to celebrate the wedding of one of his friends, these fragrances were then marketed with the lucky recipient’s consent. Although Mouchoir managed to stand the test of time, Voilette disappeared along with its namesake, the fashionable veil worn by elegant ladies to shield their faces and preserve their mystery. A man of few words, Jacques was also a secretive man. This was hardly surprising for someone whose mission was to create perfume, an indefinable substance which is both the height of abstraction and the ultimate in sensuality, something invisible, intangible, volatile and ephemeral. Perfume stirs the senses, and Jacques created his fragrances to pay homage to women, who were his sole muse. Although not particularly keen on fashionable parties, he was always in tune with women, their deepest motivations and their codes of behaviour in a continually changing world. His wife Lili greatly influenced 16 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 16-17 Po r t r a i t s t h r o u g h t h e ye a r s his creations and he dedicated several of his perfumes to her. He produced nearly 400 women’s fragrances. Most have disappeared over the years, others have lasted so long that they seem to make a mockery of olfactory fashions: Après l’Ondée in 1906, the warm, velvety and sensual L’Heure Bleue in 1912, Mitsouko, a chypre created in 1919 with its characteristic peach fragrance, Shalimar, which introduced the family of oriental perfumes in 1925, and Vol de Nuit, a highly sophisticated, enigmatic perfume, devised in 1933. The huge book of family formulas makes mention of all the perfumes created for an evening or an event. Exclusive fragrances for Sarah Bernhardt, Josephine Baker, Réjane and many other less famous women who were important figures of their time or friends of the couple. The perfume industry came into its own in Jacques’ era. Big names like Coty, Houbigant, Caron and soon Chanel and Lanvin established their own style and gained a reputation for innovation. The discoveries in molecular chemistry promoted the growth of this industry and, above all, opened up new horizons for creators. Jacques Guerlain had inherited the family’s inquisitive spirit, which urged him to meet up with scientists and exchange letters with writers with whom, in many cases, he became friends. Many of the innovative ideas that formed the basis of his great fragrances came from these encounters. Mitsouko could not have existed without the peachy, aldehydic C.14, Shalimar became the leading oriental perfume owing to a vanilla content intensified by a new synthetic product called ethyl vanillin, the mysterious Vol de Nuit drew its origins from the novel by Saint-Exupéry, 17 31/03/08 14:30:15 GUERLAIN 180 years one of Jacques’ friends. All his fragrances, which were constructed like pieces of architecture, have a dreamlike quality that defies logic. They were both unique and a mirror of their period. Art, creation, precision This hard-working, solitary perfumer made his fragrances alone, and only an assistant who helped him carry heavy flasks, had access to his laboratory. He would work for hours at his perfume organ with a detective novel in one hand and a selection of smelling strips in the other. His territory was defined by this console, which contained bottles of essential oils in alphabetical order. At the time, the formulas were entered into a huge secret book and only family members had access to it. When a formula was finished, Jacques wrote it into the book in his spiky, definite hand, as Aimé and Pierre-François-Pascal had done before him. His grandson Jean-Paul was to continue this ritual… Jacques had absolute authority over life in the factory. It would have been hard to withstand such a strong character, although no one seemed tempted to try, since he appeared to rule the workforce with an iron hand. When “Monsieur Jacques” was not happy, everyone knew it and everybody heard about it. The whole factory trembled if he raised his voice. His reputation as a hard worker was not confined to the laboratory. When he wanted to test a perfume, he would take home numerous smelling strips and early samples, so that he could smell them in an atmosphere which was not impregnated with scents like the factory. In his view, a perfume did not impose 18 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 18-19 Po r t r a i t s t h r o u g h t h e ye a r s its fragrance–it had to resemble the abstract image formed of it by the creator. He did not bother with useless embellishments: a good formula was a concise formula. This constant desire to get down to basics, mirrored by his tendency to get straight to the point when talking, could also be found in his love for nature. Wide open spaces suited his somewhat austere nature. In his spare time, he hunted or rode in the forest, and his secret passion was collecting paintings by his Impressionist friends. At that time, he was the largest collector of these painters, who were gradually establishing a reputation. When in 1955, he took his grandson, Jean-Paul, to the factory at Courbevoie, he not only initiated him into perfumery, but he also passed on his love for beauty. After a day spent working with fragrances, both men would pay a visit to antiques dealers specialising in 18th-century furniture or would go to admire works by his painter friends. Jacques worked until he was an old man and devoted a certain amount of time to Jean-Paul’s olfactory education. Whether it was at the factory or in his house at Les Mesnuls, a real family base, he never left his smelling strips and his flasks. The last formula he smelt was Jean-Paul’s study for a perfume that was to be called Chant d’Arômes. He departed this world “overcome by perfume” (Zola, La Faute de l’abbé Mouret). 19 31/03/08 14:30:15 GUERLAIN 180 years Jean-Paul Guerlain He had wanted to teach literature, but life had other plans. His deteriorating sight forced him to give up this childhood dream. His grandfather, Jacques Guerlain, decided to take young Jean-Paul under his wing and taught him to memorise fragrances. Closeted for better or worse in a tiny room at the top of the factory at Courbevoie, the teenager (who was barely seventeen) discovered the olfactory dictionary of natural and synthetic raw materials. He began by smelling and memorising the Amyl Acetate and finished a few years later with Wintergreen and some 3,000 other scents embedded in his memory. Learning to make formulas, he amused himself by recreating some of the leading perfumes of the day like Chantilly by Houbigant, or Fracas by Piguet, which he wittily nicknamed “Tracas” (Bother), because it was so hard to make. A jonquil from the south of France was to play a decisive role in the denouement of this drama. In 1956, certain species failed to flower because of the harsh winter. The perfumers, particularly Guerlain, were hard hit by shortages of natural raw materials. The jonquil was one of the products that was in short supply. A small metal container arrived at the factory and was accidentally destroyed. In a fit of temper, Jacques Guerlain ordered his grandson to recreate this fragrance. At that time, there was no chromatography, and no technical support–it could only be done by sense of smell. As Jean-Paul Guerlain stressed 20 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 20-21 Po r t r a i t s t h r o u g h t h e ye a r s “fortune smiles on the brave”; he managed to recreate the formula for the flower’s perfume and called his grandfather’s bluff. Jacques appointed him his successor, which caused a family revolution, because only eldest sons were admitted into the company of the select few in the Guerlain family, and Patrick, Jean-Paul’s older brother, had all but been appointed to ensure continuity. For nearly five years, Jean-Paul Guerlain learned all the different facets of the profession. He helped his grandfather, weighed formulas, and made creams, etc. This was how people learned the ropes at Guerlain. Jean-Paul lost no time in coming up with his first formula, Vetiver: a fragrance for men, and above all for himself. Probably because he had not yet found his muse: “the woman with whom one lives, the woman for whom”, as he was told by his beloved grandfather, “you always create perfumes”. He was only nineteen, after all. He made up for it later with his declaration of love, Nahema, a lavish bouquet of roses that was produced in 900 different blends before he chose, with difficulty, the 138th, or the oriental scents of Samsara for the woman in his life who did not wear perfume, or again the splendour of white flowers in Jardins de Bagatelle. This skilled horse rider, who took part in the World 21 31/03/08 14:30:18 GUERLAIN 180 years Dressage Championships in 1974, came up with several of his recent Aqua Allegoria at daybreak when, astride his favourite horse, he trampled the cool grass of his property at Les Mesnuls, or in the evening, when the heat brought out the fragrances of his aromatic garden. His nose is always alert and his smelling strips are always within arm’s reach. This “Marco Polo of essential oils” has been bitten by the travel bug and his passion for setting off for somewhere new has never waned. Jean-Paul shops for sweet scents all over the world. He travels to Grasse for the May rose, Calabria for bergamot, and the Nile delta or India for jasmine. But travelling the world is not enough. He owns his own land and produces his own essential oils. He has a vanilla and ylang-ylang plantation in Mayotte and he distils orange blossom in Tunisia. Far from the hustle and bustle of Paris, he enjoys the pleasure afforded by this renewed solitude and draws his ideas for future perfumes from the natural world. Like his ancestors, Jean-Paul Guerlain soon realised that perfume is a world in itself, a history, a geography. It tells a person’s innermost story. Perfume encapsulates everything: what you were, what you are, and what you would like to be. Guerlain perfumes, which are highly memorable, possess this evocative power. And, throughout his life, Jean-Paul Guerlain has never stopped capitalising on this heritage and making it bear fruit. It is not enough for him to study and produce the formulas of his ancestors, he needs new scents: fresh, sensual, familiar or unfamiliar scents to create fragrances, find his way and answer his calling: to make women even more beautiful and seductive. 22 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 22-23 Po r t r a i t s t h r o u g h t h e ye a r s His persistence is equalled only by his rebellious nature. Refusing to take the beaten track, he blazes a new trail through the mysteries of creation. What does it matter if rose perfumes are all the rage: he dreams up a woody jasmine, which receives the seal of approval. He is renowned in the profession for his passion and his generosity, as well as his love for women, who have inspired his finest fragrances–Samsara, Nahema, Chamade and many others familiar only to the women they were created for. Because Jean-Paul obligingly hires out his talent. Sold throughout the world or exclusively in the Guerlain boutiques, his fragrances reveal his love for natural raw materials and his preference for concise formulas. He shares his ancestors’ view that the beauty of a perfume has nothing to do with the number of ingredients. What is important is to obtain the right accord. Everything takes place in the creator’s mind before a smelling strip is dipped into a sample formula. His range of ingredients include the finest traditional raw materials that he has carefully selected, plus a wide range of sweet-smelling molecules that were not around before. Since 2002, he has held the role of consultant to the President of Guerlain, supervising the quality of the natural ingredients and continuing to blend compelling accords. He spends his free time with his three grandsons, shares Jean d’Ormesson’s love of Chateaubriand, and listens to Brahms and Mozart. This composer of fragrances also has a gift for flavours, as can be seen by the local dishes and recipes of his own devising that grace his table. He also adores wine and this passion continues to swell his wine cellar, which already contains 23 31/03/08 14:30:19 3,000 bottles from all over the world. And, although he has given up his youthful hobby of cabinet making, he still enjoys the feel of wood “that blend of roughness and silkiness”. 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 24-25 The great guerlain fragrances 31/03/08 14:30:21 GUERLAIN 180 years “Is perfume not the most intense form of memory?” Jean-Paul Guerlain 26 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 26-27 The great Guerlain fragrances We were guided in our early explorations by different smells. Perfumes have, wrote Baudelaire, “ the power to expand into infinity”. And yet it may be our own sense of infinity that they reveal, reviving our capacity for wonder, hope and remembering. We have all probably had this experience at some point in our lives: we smell something and suddenly we are overcome by a moment from our childhood, the presence of a loved one or a forgotten landscape. Reality fades before this memory. Perfumes possess the rare power to help us pinpoint the true essence of happiness, which is so hard to define or express. Just as a melody can enhance a poem, perfumes often bear witness to our first emotions, our deepest feelings. We never forget the fragrance of those special meetings, especially if it was love at first sight; those fragrances remain engraved in our memory. A drop of perfume behind the ear, on the nape of the neck, on the inner wrists, on the décolleté, then a mist of eau de toilette for other people, who will mainly detect the top notes, while the perfume develops its base notes out of sight. The perfume we never tire of is like a mirror. It reflects our moods, strengthens us and soothes us with the familiarity of its accords. It creates invisible bonds between us and another person. Wearing perfume is a way of placing ourselves centre stage and of protecting ourselves. 27 31/03/08 14:30:21 GUERLAIN 180 years The great Guerlain fragrances Guerlain’s fragrance creators had a deep insight into the power of perfume. Since 1828, they have produced around 760 fragrances which have fortified generations of women with their secret accords. There cannot be many people who have not owned a Guerlain at some point in their life. The seductive power of these fragrances is partly down to a family resemblance that makes them totally recognisable. The key to this enigma is an accord, the Guerlinade, which is found in each of the fragrances. A jealously guarded secret, this accord contains, among other things, jasmine enhanced by rose, vanilla, tonka bean… but the perfumer’s art is all about keeping precious formulas a secret. With five generations of perfumers, poets of the indefinable, Guerlain has produced some olfactory landmarks in the history of perfumery that have survived the test of time and fashion. At times inspired by human experience, at times the result of transient feelings or intense emotions, they were all created with love and passion. Let us attempt to unlock the secret of some of these fragrances… 28 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 28-29 29 31/03/08 14:30:22 GUERLAIN 180 years The great Guerlain fragrances Eau de cologne impériale 1853 “Music is about together notes that love each other” Free translation of quote from Mozart At the age of nineteen, Pierre-François-Pascal Guerlain left his native Picardy and the fragrant aromas of the shop owned by his father, a spice dealer and pewter pot maker, for England, where he studied to be a chemist and physician. He then came to Paris and, with his sound scientific knowledge and several years of experience with future competitors like Piver and Dissey he founded the Guerlain company in 1828. It did not take him long to win over the elegant ladies and dandies of the period and set the benchmark in the world of beauty. He could not have known back then that he was founding a dynasty of five generations of Guerlain perfumers. This prolific creator was able to turn his hand to skincare and make-up products while giving free rein to his passion for perfume. 30 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 30-31 31 31/03/08 14:30:28 GUERLAIN 180 years The great Guerlain fragrances His first tour de force was his creation, in 1853, of the Eau de Cologne Impériale for Eugénie de Montijo, Napoleon III’s wife. According to Guerlain family legend, this light, citrusy eau de Cologne was created in response to a request from Her Majesty, who asked Guerlain, a qualified chemist and physician, if he could relieve the symptoms of her terrible migraines… This first bespoke perfume earned its creator the title of “His Majesty’s Official Perfumer”. Pierre-François-Pascal Guerlain capitalised on this Imperial seal of approval, and his fragrances took the courts of Europe by storm. Opposite: Eau de Cologne Impériale advertisement designed by Elise Darcy (1936) 32 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 32-33 33 31/03/08 14:30:29 GUERLAIN 180 years JICKY 1889 “Jicky is emotion in a bottle.” Jean-Paul Guerlain In 1889, Aimé Guerlain created his first masterpiece: Jicky. It was the height of the industrial revolution and chemistry and photography were no longer in their infancy. Aimé had an enquiring mind, like his father, Pierre-François-Pascal, and he was greatly interested in the new discoveries of his time–particularly in two synthetic molecules which had just been isolated: coumarin and vanillin. Aimé Guerlain combined these two in his formula to create Jicky, a perfume so complex and so contemporary that it was immediately described as the “first modern perfume”. Jicky broke with traditional perfumery, which merely imitated nature, and marked the advent of an “emotional” type of perfumery which no longer attempted to emulate the fragrance of flowers, but endeavoured to stir emotion. Jicky meant that, in the future, perfumes would possess a definite fragrance trail, a lasting effect and an interplay 34 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 34-35 31/03/08 14:30:38 GUERLAIN 180 years of many unique facets. Jicky is a magical perfume that combines flamboyant top notes with warm, delicate base notes. Although women were unsure about Jicky when it was first launched and immediately adopted by men, it is now very popular with both sexes. Why was it called “Jicky”? It was in memory of a girl, nicknamed Jicky, whom Aimé Guerlain had loved when he was studying in England. It was purely coincidental that the diminutive of Jacques was also Jicky. Opposite: Jicky advertisement designed by Georges Buisson (1898) 36 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 36-37 31/03/08 14:30:40 GUERLAIN 180 years The great Guerlain fragrances MOUCHOIR DE MONSIEUR 1904 “The only truly exhilarating experience in the life of a man is seducing women.” Free translation of Guy de Maupassant At the turn of the 20th century, the dandies started a fashion for delicately perfumed fine linen handkerchiefs, while society ladies concealed their eyes behind a black veil. Jacques Guerlain mischievously created Mouchoir de Monsieur and Voilette de Madame for the wedding of one of his friends. “Mouchoir” blends citrus freshness and exuberant aromatic notes with the subtlety of a fougère accord that contains a touch of delicately powdered wood. It is still a hit with the sophisticated man about town. Maison Guerlain on the Champs-Elysées accomplished a tour de force in 2005 when it reissued these two fragrances in their original “snail” bottle. 38 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 38-39 39 31/03/08 14:30:43 The great Guerlain fragrances APRÈS L’ONDÉE “Certain smells, sometimes simple ones, can open the floodgates of memory.” Marcel Proust, À l’ombre des jeunes filles en fleurs Free translation For those who like imagery, this romantic, powdery perfume could be the illustration of a photo by Boubat. It could depict the figure of a dreamy, passionate woman walking through undergrowth in the early years of the 20th century or, at the same time, it could embody the spirit of the dancer Isadora Duncan, who, free from all constraint, whirled bare-foot, clad in long transparent veils. Its floral note is orchestrated around violet, iris and vanilla tones. This sweet perfume, which might seem old-fashioned to some, still fires the imagination. Contemporary young women who have made it their choice, swear they cannot live without it. Age cannot wither grace and poetry and Après l’Ondée has the indescribable appeal of ageless creations. 41 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 40-41 31/03/08 14:30:45 GUERLAIN 180 years The great Guerlain fragrances L’HEURE BLEUE 1912 “The sun has set, but night has not yet fallen. It is the suspended hour… The hour when man finally feels at one with the world and the light.” Jacques Guerlain In 1912, Jacques Guerlain created L’Heure Bleue. This bouquet of roses mellowed by iris, violet and vanilla, conjures up its creator’s favourite time of day when, he says: “night has not yet found its star”. L’Heure Bleue advertisement designed by Elise Darcy (1936) L’Heure Bleue arose out of that fleeting feeling which inspired the Impressionist painters whose works Jacques Guerlain collected. This armful of sweet flowers, stirred by a powdery breeze carrying oriental notes, makes L’Heure Bleue a paean to the simple pleasures of life and Romanticism. 42 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 42-43 43 31/03/08 14:30:58 GUERLAIN 180 years MITSOUKO 1919 “Mitsouko prepares the voluptuous way for emotion and sensuality in bewitching bursts of jasmine, patchouli and a peach note that conjures up the fruit at its ripest.” Jacques Guerlain After four terrible years of fighting and hardship which scarred Europe forever, women wanted to make up for lost time and live life to the full. They cut their hair boyishly short, raised the hems of their dresses and became a force to be reckoned with in every field. At that time, Europe was fascinated by Japan and Far-Eastern culture. Jacques Guerlain created Mitsouko, a slightly androgynous chypre perfume that paid homage to the heroine of the best-selling novel La Bataille by his friend, Claude Farrère. Mitsouko, a beautiful Japanese bride, was secretly in love with a British officer. In 1905, when the Russo-Japanese war broke out, Mitsouko waited with dignity for the fighting to end, nobly suppressing her emotions. This was the type of story that was bound to strike a chord in the post-war years. Opposite: Mitsouko advertisement designed by Charnotet (1959) 44 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 44-45 31/03/08 14:31:02 GUERLAIN 180 years The great Guerlain fragrances Mitsouko is a chypre, a family of fragrances that smell of autumnal forests and undergrowth. The name chypre is French for the island of Cyprus where, as legend has it, Aphrodite, the goddess of love, was born. This island played a central role in the perfume trade from the Orient. It was Guerlain that first used the name chypre in an Eau de Chypre in 1872, then Cyprisine in 1894 and Chypre de Paris in 1909. What made Mitsouko such a modern fragrance was Jacques Guerlain’s remarkable, and audacious idea of combining a chypre with a fruity peach note. Mitsouko means “mystery” in Japanese; it afforded a new take on chypre perfumes by combining fruity top notes with some deliciously enigmatic woody base notes, thereby symbolising a passionate, mysterious type of femininity that had never been seen before… 46 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 46-47 47 31/03/08 14:31:14 GUERLAIN 180 years SHALIMAR The great Guerlain fragrances 1925 “A successful perfume is one whose fragrance corresponds to an initial dream.” Jacques Guerlain Jacques Guerlain’s greatest success was, undoubtedly, Shalimar. It was launched in 1925, when the Decorative Arts Exhibition was setting the trend for a rich and inventive new style that showcased the most precious materials and the rarest essential oils. This taste for Oriental exoticism grew ever more pronounced during these years. A spontaneous act of creation? A stroke of luck? As the story goes, Jacques Guerlain, brimming with enthusiasm for a sample of synthetic vanilla he had just received, poured it into a bottle of Jicky, just to see… The exquisite outcome exceeded all expectation. Voluptuous, sensual, so audacious as to be almost provocative, Shalimar aroused desire and pushed back the boundaries of social taboo. 48 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 48-49 49 31/03/08 14:31:29 GUERLAIN 180 years The great Guerlain fragrances Its name was no less captivating: Shalimar, which means “temple of love” in Sanskrit, refers to the legendary garden where the Mogul Emperor, Shah Jahan, used to keep his trysts with his favourite wife, Mumtaz Mahal. Deeply in love, he was inconsolable when she died and he built a lavish mausoleum, the fabulous Taj Mahal, in her memory. Jacques Guerlain illustrated this story with a perfume from the Arabian Nights, an olfactory hymn to love and sensuality. It is a fragrance that expresses temptation, the lure of the forbidden fruit, and arouses the desire to draw ever closer. This bold, voluptuous fragrance was the very first oriental fragrance. Opposite: Shalimar advertisement designed by Leonard (1926) Shalimar advertisement designed by Vassi (1926) 50 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 50-51 31/03/08 14:31:35 GUERLAIN 180 years VOL DE NUIT 1933 “Perhaps they will catch a note that would be a sign of life. If the aircraft and its navigation lights climb among the stars, perhaps they will hear this star singing.” Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Vol de nuit In 1933, Jacques Guerlain produced another exceptional fragrance, Vol de Nuit, whose dominant dynamic green, woody note is mellowed by vanilla and iris. The multiple floral and woody facets of this fragrance unfold within a bold oriental fragrance trail. Inspired by the novel written by his friend Saint-Exupéry, the perfume Vol de Nuit was dedicated to women of action who, like the famous contemporary aviator, Hélène Boucher, were able to cultivate a love of danger and make a name for themselves in a male world, without sacrificing their femininity. Vol de Nuit advertisement designed by Charnotet (1959) 52 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 52-53 31/03/08 14:31:50 The great Guerlain fragrances VeTIVER 1959 “All theory is grey while the tree of life is vibrant green.” Free translation of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Jean-Paul Guerlain almost did not become one of the company’s perfumers, because it was the eldest son of the family who had right of inheritance. Fate decreed otherwise though and his career started in 1959 with the creation of an exclusively men’s fragrance: Vetiver. Guerlain had long been providing vetiver in diluted form which, for the record, was a best-seller in… Mexico. In the 1950s, competition began to get fiercer, and the family decided to produce an elegant, highly sophisticated new fragrance, using vetiver roots as a base. Young Jean-Paul, who was barely eighteen years old, was entrusted with this mission. After several failed attempts, he produced this subtle dosage of vetiver rhizomes that conjured up scents rising from the earth in the pale light of dawn. This portrait of the first morning of the world was enriched with a woody accord and the refined elegance of spices and tobacco to produce an exquisite, sophisticated fragrance. Opposite: Vetiver advertisement designed by Arrigoni Neri (1982) 54 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 54-55 55 31/03/08 14:32:01 The great Guerlain fragrances CHANT D’ARÔMES 1965 “I dreamed of an island greener than dreams.” Saint-John Perse, Poèmes Free translation This youthful creation was Jean-Paul Guerlain’s first women’s fragrance, created for the woman who became his wife a few months later. Described as a demure perfume, Chant d’Arômes is a bouquet of spring flowers like honeysuckle and gardenia. Mandarin and bergamot provide a hint of mischievousness over a jasmine and ylang-ylang base. Chant d’Arômes advertisement designed by Mik (1962) This fragrance revealed Jean-Paul Guerlain’s deep love for natural ingredients. 57 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 56-57 31/03/08 14:32:05 The great Guerlain fragrances HABIT ROUGE 1965 “An elegant allure does not make the man but it does forge his reputation in the eyes of the world.” Claude Aveline, Les Réflexions de monsieur F.A.T. Free translation Some families have passions that are so firmly engrained that they are almost a genetic marker. A love of horses is embedded in the Guerlain family genes (Jean-Paul Guerlain sat on a pony before he could even walk). It made sense, therefore, for this perfumer, who was actually a dressage champion, to dedicate a fragrance to the equestrian art. Habit Rouge, named after those famous jackets worn by horse-riders, is an acrobatic fragrance in which the spices and patchouli are given a new lease of life on contact with the orange, lemon and bergamot. However, what made Habit Rouge an unsettling perfume for men in the 1960s, was a guest appearance by vanilla, which gave it a more feminine side. This rich, sensual vanilla note is very prominent and highly unusual for the conventional Puritanism of earlier men’s fragrances. Opposite: Habit Rouge advertisement (1965) 58 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 58-59 59 31/03/08 14:32:17 GUERLAIN 180 years CHAMADE 1969 “In its way, a perfume is an invisible piece of clothing, playing on the tension between what is hidden and what is revealed.” Jean-Paul Guerlain Women wanted equality with men and the late 1960s marked a watershed in the relationship between the sexes. The novel by Françoise Sagan, La Chamade, had a profound impact on an entire generation of young women who wanted a different lifestyle. Jean-Paul Guerlain, who had just turned 32, was not unmoved by these new patterns of behaviour. He created Chamade for these young women who were flaunting their womanhood, a perfume as bold as the women it was made for. This was the first time that a perfumer had come up with a formula combining the green, fruity accent of blackcurrant bud with a verdant harmony of jacinth, roses and galbanum. This composition was blended with a typical “Guerlinade”, whose main ingredients were vanilla, iris and tonka bean. For a respectable company like Guerlain, this was a somewhat revolutionary perfume… Chamade advertisement designed by Nikasinovich (1971) 60 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 60-61 31/03/08 14:32:41 GUERLAIN 180 years NAHeMA 1979 “In perfect stillness, with her hands clasped over her heart, she continued smiling, while she listened to the whispers of the perfumes in her buzzing head.” Émile Zola, La Faute de l’abbé Mouret Free translation The most beautiful portrait of roses ever dedicated to a woman, Nahema was the favourite perfume of its creator, Jean-Paul Guerlain, who loves, even adores, roses–there are over 80 varieties in his garden in Les Mesnuls. Nahema originated in the emotion he felt when Catherine Deneuve appeared in the film Benjamin: the Diary of an Innocent Boy. All dressed in white, surrounded by rosebuds, she dazzled him and provided him with the vision for his perfume. Nahema is a highly sophisticated perfume, structured over the insistent rhythm of Ravel’s Boléro. The main olfactory note gradually becomes an obsessive presence. Nahema is an absolute rose, constructed on a floral rose accord which heightens the heady appeal of the top notes and is underpinned by a woody, fruity base with an exciting hint of sandalwood. This rich, sumptuous ultra-feminine perfume took its creator four years of hard work and over five-hundred attempts. 62 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 62-63 31/03/08 14:32:42 GUERLAIN 180 years SAMSARA 1989 “Samsara is Nirvana, and Nirvana is Samsara.” Arnaud Desjardins A century after Jicky, Jean-Paul Guerlain created Samsara for the woman in his life who did not wear perfume. The only instructions given to the perfumer: sandalwood and jasmine, which were particular favourites of the woman who henceforth was known as the Lady of Samsara. Although Guerlain perfumes have always been created for a woman, Samsara is the pure, true expression of love. In order to win over his muse, Jean-Paul Guerlain made numerous trips to India where he bought the purest sandalwood, tracked down a jasmine hitherto only used for religious offerings and built a factory to distill it. He completely altered habits and attitudes to attain his goal. The difficulties were legion and the pitfalls inevitable, but people will do anything for love. The very concept of Samsara focused on a new spirituality that was beginning to emerge in intellectual circles of 64 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 64-65 31/03/08 14:32:43 GUERLAIN 180 years The great Guerlain fragrances that period. Women wanted to find a new meaning in life and the hard-line consumer society was in a bad way. There was a desire for different experiences. Samsara responded to this quest for serenity, fulfilment and the Absolute. Its sophisticated structure, with a dominant accord of two notes, jasmine and sandalwood, punctuated by citrusy woody notes, took Jean-Paul Guerlain two years of hard work and over three-hundred attempts to get right. Its name, which means “eternal rebirth” in Sanskrit, is written on the “wheel of life”, the central religious symbol of Tibetan Buddhism. Samsara sketchs designed by Robert Granai 66 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 66-67 67 31/03/08 14:32:45 GUERLAIN 180 years the Aqua Allegoria and… 1999 “My garden has many faces, it enjoys mirroring my moods or, on the contrary, surprising me. And, often even, it manages to move me.” Jean-Paul Guerlain Women have always been the main source of inspiration for Guerlain’s perfume creators, but 1999 saw a sea change in the exclusive world of fragrance. Jean-Paul Guerlain paid a warm tribute to the natural world he loved by creating a collection of eaux de toilette, the Aqua Allegoria, with their floral and fruity scents. Every spring was now celebrated with the arrival of two new fragrances. Like flowerings, some were short-lived, while others became perennials. Although very different, they had two things in common–their charm and originality: Pamplelune, Herba Fresca, Grosellina, Figue-Iris, Mandarine-Basilic. 68 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 68-69 31/03/08 14:33:01 GUERLAIN 180 years L’INSTANT DE GUERLAIN 2003 “The instant lasted, stretched, lingered, his fingers were now searching for my arm, or maybe it was my arm reaching for his.” Irène Frain L’Instant de Guerlain is the olfactory expression of one of those special moments when everything can change suddenly, when we are touched to the core of our being. It is a moment of intense emotion between a man and a woman. The woman is more conscious of her femininity than ever before–she seems to have learned something new about herself. Time may stand still. In the tradition of Guerlain’s classic fragrances, this perfume is a fresh take on the ultra-famous Guerlinade. Created by Sylvaine Delacourte and Maurice Roucel, L’Instant de Guerlain introduced a new olfactory interpretation of the floral family: crystalline ambers. The citrus honey accord brings in a second accord constructed around Chinese magnolia, enhanced by sambac jasmine and ylang-ylang, which then brightens the amber accord. Three dominant sensations that merge to create a radiant, sensuous perfume. 70 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 70-71 31/03/08 14:33:18 GUERLAIN 180 years The great Guerlain fragrances L’INSTANT DE GUERLAIN POUR HOMME 2004 “Man is born for pleasure.” Free translation of quote by Blaise Pascal An indeterminate length of time and time delineated by a story. Removing the stopper from a bottle can be like opening a novel. A story unfolds that no one will want to forget. L’Instant de Guerlain pour Homme is one of those irresistible fragrances that bring all kinds of unexpected feelings to the surface. After the meeting afforded in L’Instant de Guerlain, every moment has to be lived together, intensely and passionately. Designed as a contrast, this men’s fragrance should exhilarate the woman who smells it and the man who wears it. Its secret? It appeals directly to the heart and the senses. Everything hinges on the element of surprise, the interplay between fire and ice, bold masculinity and reserved femininity. Only women could solve the mystery of the male psyche in this way. As it happens, Sylvaine Delacourte and Béatrice Piquet 72 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 72-73 73 31/03/08 14:33:43 GUERLAIN 180 years focused on the hopes and desires of the men who make life interesting. Guerlain’s men’s fragrance for the third millennium is a radiant, woody perfume that harnesses the energy of lemon, bergamot and star anise for a cool undertone which then burns with the heat of bitter cocoa and hibiscus and is spellbound by the heady scents of patchouli. 74 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 74-75 31/03/08 14:33:45 GUERLAIN 180 years INSOLENCE 2006 “Insolence is one of the last remaining luxuries.” Daniel Picouly L’Enfant léopard Free translation Insolence is a sparkle in the eyes, a bold smile that fears nothing and no-one; a silent look of amusement. It is also casual grace, ironic elegance, style and a refusal to be just anybody–at any price. It is a woman who wins hearts by her presence, charisma and spontaneity; it is Hilary Swank, the muse of this fragrance. Guerlain wanted a fragrance that overturned the traditional olfactory pyramid in favour of an overall composition that went straight to the heart of the matter: violet. A new dazzling violet, intense and highly charged by a granita of red fruits; a triumphant violet. The very opposite of the timid note that is usually muted, overshadowed. This is a transfiguration, a discovery, a totally unexpected, yet familiar flower that transports you into a world where boldness, irreverence and freedom reign supreme. 76 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 76-77 31/03/08 14:34:05 GUERLAIN 180 years MAISON GUERLAIN 2005 Guerlain’s fragrances pride themselves on being timeless and this quality was central to the concept behind the Maison Guerlain and the exclusive Guerlain boutiques, which offer special or limited editions and exclusive fragrances which are only on sale in these havens of luxury, calm and sensuality. In 2005, a golden space dedicated to perfume was created at the heart of the boutique at 68 Avenue des Champs-Élysées, a space where Guerlain could give free range to its talent: reissued “vintage” perfumes whose formula and packaging are identical to the original; a special collection, L’Art et la Matière, which places the emphasis on a single precious ingredient; the reissue of special edition perfumes that celebrated a particular event or occasion and the imperial fountains where the gilded bee bottles are given a new lease of life. An array of innovative products celebrating Guerlain’s creative panache. 78 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 78-79 The great Guerlain fragrances New olfactory horizons L’Art et la Matière Guerlain’s perfume creators have always focused on the materials and have refused to be bound by the codes of fashion. This endeavour continues with the creation of L’Art et la Matière, an exciting new collection of perfumes that allow the company’s “noses” to give free rein to the passion and emotion inspired by an original, precious raw material. Sylvaine Delacourte, Director of Perfume Creation, organises these fragrances into two groups: Fleurs Sublimes and Matières Précieuses. Rose Barbare, Angélique Noire, Cuir Beluga, Bois d’Arménie, Iris Ganache, Cruel Gardenia play the lead roles on this new olfactory stage. 79 31/03/08 14:34:11 GUERLAIN 180 years Giving the past a future Limited editions Plus que jamais Guerlain, a superb fragrance constructed around Jean-Paul Guerlain’s beloved signature flowers (rose, ylang-ylang, jasmine, iris), was created in 2005. 2006 saw the introduction of Nuit d’amour whose heady olfactory impact was due to its beautiful ingredients (sandalwood, May rose, iris). In 2007, Quand vient la pluie, a subtle perfume by Sylvaine Delacourte and Thierry Wasseur, demonstrated the beauty of a landscape fragrance in a stunning sculptured bottle by Serge Mansau. 80 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 80-81 The great Guerlain fragrances Les Parisiennes These perfumes were all created for a special occasion and, as such, were never meant to last. These eight eaux de toilette are being reissued to the delight of the men or women who once wore them and thought them lost forever. Whether worn by men or women, they come in the same historic bottle, designed for the Eau de Cologne Impériale in 1853. 81 31/03/08 14:34:17 GUERLAIN 180 years The great Guerlain fragrances Il était une fois… Guerlain takes you on an olfactory journey back in time with the fragrances of Vega, Sous le Vent, Kadine, Cachet Jaune and Ode. A completely unexpected encounter with raw materials in their natural state, presented in understated dishes designed by Andrée Putman, candles to create an ambiance and even an amusing Eau de Lit to inject a little fragrance into your dreams… Vintage It would be impossible to list the names of every single Guerlain fragrance. There are around 760 of them! But some are being reissued, having lost none of their former beauty. In 2005, the world was able to discover Voilette de Madame and Mouchoir de Monsieur, created in 1904 by Jacques Guerlain, in their “snail” bottle. The following year, the bright, fresh Eau Hégémonienne, created in 1880 by Aimé Guerlain, had its turn. 2007 saw the revival of the deceptively demure warmth of Candide Effluve, a rich fragrance produced by Jacques Guerlain in 1922. 82 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 82-83 2008 also bodes well with some matchless pleasures in store: the planned reissue of the Parfum des Champs-Élysées and its remarkable Baccarat crystal “tortoise” bottle in a generous 500 ml size. And the crème de la crème: the chance to own a completely personalised perfume. A unique perfume that is yours alone. The Guerlain family used to create exclusive perfumes for key society figures or for friends and loved ones. Now, 180 years later, Guerlain is reviving this incredible branch of expertise which played a significant part in the company’s reputation. Selecting the right perfume is an adventure which, like all great journeys, requires a great deal of thought, patience and time. But some women, despite having the uncontrollable urge to own a unique customised perfume, do not have the free time needed for its conception. For them, Sylvaine Delacourte has created the Collection Privée, boasting a score of exclusive fragrances that correspond to the main olfactory families. When one of these fragrances has been chosen, it becomes the exclusive property of the person who has selected it. 83 31/03/08 14:34:27 photographiC CrEdits Guerlain Archives Pages : 4, 11, 15, 21, 33, 37, 38, 39, 43, 45, 50, 51, 52, 54, 56, 57, 58, 60, 61, 63 Antoine Bootz : page 28 Patrick Paufert : pages 30, 35, 41, 42, 46, 49, 53, 65, 69, 71, 72, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83 Arrigoni Neri : page 54 Dessins de Robert Granai : pages 66, 67 Dessin de Thierry Marchal : page 74 Azim Haidaryan : page 75 Chirol : page 63 James White : page 77 3-NezCreations ANG 27-03.indd 84 31/03/08 14:34:27