The
visual is the final frontier of niche. The sector built itself against it
almost by default, for want of proper budgets. But in an increasingly crowded
market, visual identity will make the
difference. Older brands are upgrading packaging, display materials and
counters/shops. The better thought-out new ones, like Arquiste and Olfactive Studio, addressed the issue of photography from the outset, the former with
still-lives inspired by Flemish painting, the latter by basing its very concept
on it. Tellingly, a ghostly face materializes on the picture that goes with
Olfactive Studio’s latest, Flashback:
just as the mainstream is making a tentative sortie from its advertising
default mode with the La Petite Robe
Noire campaigns, niche has been edging towards human representation. But
how could it possibly compete with luxury brands that can afford the world’s
best photographers and most beautiful faces? Any attempt at replicating this
type of ad runs the risk of coming off as low-budget.
One
solution is to give the fragrance a famous muse, as État Libre d’Orange did
with Tilda Swinton for Like This,
neatly solving the issue of image in both senses of the term – annexing not
only Swinton’s portraits but also her aura and reputation. This type of
partnership, not only with performers (a standard for mainstream brands) but
also with non-industry creative forces that can also supply ready-made images
and imagery, is well on its way to becoming a new niche trope, as the
collection inaugurated earlier this year by Frédéric Malle with Dries Van Noten demonstrates.
No
one plays that game better than Byredo’s art-school-trained Ben Gorham. Sunday Cologne, initially called Fantastic Man, resulted from a
partnership with the eponymous Dutch magazine. M/MINK sprung from a visual brief supplied by the graphic designer duo M/M (Michael Amzalag and Mathias Augustyniak). The brand-new 1996 takes the process one step further
since its “muses” are the Dutch duo Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin, whose
work spans fashion, advertising, portrait and art photography and who, not
incidentally, belong to the same creative nebula as M/M (and Björk, for whom they
teamed up). If you were going to pick photographers for the campaign of a
cutting-edge niche brand, you couldn’t do better than Inez & Vinoodh, whose
perfume ad portfolio includes Chloé, Victor & Rolf, Narciso Rodriguez,
Donna Karan, Givenchy, Armani, etc.
What’s
pretty new here is that through this partnership, 1996 is one of the first niche perfumes to have a face, not in a
campaign, granted. But it is on the
box: “Kirsten, 1996”, first featured in Inez Van Lamsweerde’s “The Widow” exhibition,
which toured 5 galleries in 1997.
Not an ad campaign, then. A little girl’s
face. But still a face, shot by the most sought-after artists of fashion-etc.
photography – a clever, roundabout way of hoisting Byredo up to the visual
level of luxury brands.
The
scent started out as a limited edition commissioned by Inez & Vinoodh to
give out as a gift. According to the press material, it generated such a buzz
that Ben Gorham decided to include it in his collection. Though inspired by “Kirsten
1996”, 1996 does not attempt to
translate the model’s baby face and raspberry-stained lips into notes. Rather,
it is based on the tastes, travel memories and house of the couple, “full of
warm wood and high end design”.
Iris
is pretty much perfume shorthand for “high-end”, with connotations of “cutting-edge”.
In 1996, it gets the Dior Homme rather than the Infusion d’Iris treatment. The scent has
very little of the velvet powder-puff fuzziness of, say, Atelier Cologne’s new Silver Iris, which is similarly based on
an iris-amber-patchouli axis – the amber in Silver
Iris is dubbed “white”, while 1996’s
is “black” and described as “warm and almost viscous”. A spot-on description: the
scent does have the chewiness of dark chocolate – an effect achieved by boosting
the chocolate-y facet of certain iris extractions with patchouli – stuffed with
a booze-laced, sticky filling. The other dark facet of iris, leather –
underlined here by a subtle animalic undercurrent –, keeps any hint of
sweetness in check: this is a treat for grownups. Which may well explain the
rapturous look on young Kirsten’s face. When
she’s good, she’s very good, but when she’s bad she’s better.
Illustrations found on the website of the Matthew Marks Gallery, New York.
First of all, great to see posts from you again!
RépondreSupprimerThis sounds right up my alley right now alongside with a couple other new ones from your fall favourites -post... Do you happen to know who the nose is for this? At one point I got the impression that Jérôme Epinette does the perfumes and Olivia Giacobetti does/did the candles, but I'm not sure if this applies to everything Byredo.
If it is Jérôme E., it's interesting to see you mention Silver Iris as that's his work as well. My nose registered Silver Iris as a praline-ish berry iris, a more sofisticated take on La vie est Belle.
Mikael, great to be back! I didn't ask who did this, and it's not mentioned on the press material. I assume it was Jérôme Epinette (it's certainly not Olivia's style). I hadn't checked the name of the perfumer for Silver Iris, actually, I just gravitated towards it to compare the treatment of the notes.
RépondreSupprimerNow that niche has a face, does this mean that my face gets it's own perfume company?
RépondreSupprimerIf your face finds the ideas and money, why not? Let it do all the hard work!
RépondreSupprimerI had a copy of this image clipped from a fashion magazine and taped to my wall as a teenager. I think I even might have used it as reference for a high school art project. What an odd coincidence! I'm eager to try this.
RépondreSupprimerCJ, wow, that really *is* a coincidence... It's a very striking image and I'm not surprised it had inspired you back then.
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