Isabelle Doyen’s lab, Aromatique Majeur, is tucked away in the paved courtyard of a 19th century building not far from the place de l’Étoile. The place is tiny: two rooms – one for the office, with a battered couch, the other for the lab, with its hundreds of vials of raw materials and rows of vintage fragrances behind a glass cupboard.
I’ve met Isabelle a few times already for informal conversations: a slight, quiet woman with an easy laugh and warm manner, casually elegant in her motorcycle boots. Anyone who’s sampled her work for the small Swiss indie house Les Nez could guess there’s another side to her than the lovely fragrances she’s been turning out for the house of Annick Goutal, first with Annick herself, and now with Annick’s daughter Camille: playful, experimental pieces of olfactory research. Lately, this more adventurous streak seems to have seeped into the chic Parisian bottles of the pioneer niche label. The latest launch, a shimmering eau de toilette called Ninfeo Mio, bristles with raspy green citrus shot with aromatic essences, a touch of toughness wrapped in rounded lactonic notes. And that touch of toughness, that’s always expressed itself in Goutal’s masculines before popping up in the crackling ozonic opening of Un Matin d’Orage and the scorched notes of Encens Flamboyant, and going for the jugular in Turtle Vetiver, is what makes Isabelle Doyen’s style so compelling.
We [Isabelle and Camille Goutal] were a bit worried about that. But we never constrain ourselves on what we feel like doing, and we’re regularly in the mood to do something fresh. Each time, we wonder how we’ll manage to find our way between Hadrien, l’Eau du sud, Mandragore… Then we tell ourselves it doesn’t matter, and we go ahead.
The Garden of the Hesperides. So, naturally, citrus. We were also thinking about verbena, and we got a bit tangled up in that idea, we weren’t happy with the results. We groped for a few months. Then one day, a friend came to see me at the lab and I told him about this garden idea we were having trouble with. He told me he’d just come back from Rome where he’d visited an incredible garden, the Garden of Ninfa. “What you’re telling me about the perfume you’d like to make reminds me so much of that garden that you should go and have a look.” He describes the place to me: it sounded like heaven on earth. That was in May, but we weren’t able to go there straight away. Meanwhile, the idea this friend had brought us on a silver plate boosted our imagination. We enriched our idea, we let go of verbena and just like that, without knowing why, we added lavender and fig… Our formula was well on its way, and we were pretty happy with it, but I was a bit bothered. In Italy, I only knew Tuscany and I was telling myself that I’d never seen much lavender in Tuscany. Same thing for fig trees, there weren’t that many… I was worried because what we were doing wasn’t the real story.
Actually, it is! Otherwise, we wouldn’t have been able to say that there were fig trees in the Garden of the Hesperides, that we’d invented it all. It bothered me not to be able to confirm that there were figs and lavender in that imaginary garden. We always try to stick to nature and reality as much as possible.
We went in late August. The garden is open to the public once a month but it’s possible to organize private visits. We crossed a totally uninteresting countryside and reached this great portal that a guard opened for us before letting us loose on our won. And once we entered the garden, we saw fig trees everywhere! Phew! Check! So we were reassured on that point. We walk towards some ruins and spot an aromatic herb garden. We take a path to walk towards it… It was lined with lavender! Phew again! Then we reach a citrus orchard… It was all there ! There was also a river running across the garden called the Ninfeo. It ended up giving the fragrance its name. “Ninfa” was already copyrighted and besides, we didn’t like the feminine connotation, because we thought some men would be uncomfortable about it. Ninfeo is perfect for men, and as for women, when they think something smells good, they go ahead and wear it…
Lavender is used to bolster the citrus. It reinforces the lime aspect of the formula.
Absolutely. Though when I was smelling our composition, I was getting a lot of lavender, and I was wondering if we hadn’t overdone it a bit. I didn’t say anything about it but I was a bit unsure on that point. I asked people now and then “Do you smell the lavender?” “Not particularly.” The fig came in because we love that note. But there too, I was telling myself « Oh boy, we didn’t set out to do a fig! » Still, the people around us didn’t seem to get much fig. Those who did liked it and felt comfortable about it. But the fact of finding fig trees in the garden confirmed that we’d headed in the right direction without knowing it.
What brought us to the fig tree was the idea of lemon wood, which is quite warm and milky.
No, there isn’t. I’d smelled lemon tree wood because a botanist and sculptor friend had given me some chips of it. To smell it, you have to burn it over hot coals like incense. It’s a very sweet, suave smell. I’d always kept that idea at the back of my mind, telling myself I’d use it one day. So, to give the effect of lemon tree wood, we used lactones that are also used to do fig tree… And all of a sudden, a fig tree grew out of our formula! The lemon wood also led to the idea of lime and lemon leaf; we used galbanum for the leafy note. Lavender came in to bolster that effect.
Not that many though.
Yes there is. It’s like cellophane, it acts as a wrapping.
Lentisque is something I’d always wanted to put it, to support the lime facets. It’s got green, mossy and coumarine facets. [Isabelle makes me smell a strip dipped in lentisque.] It’s a good link between the fig tree and the citrus. When I cut limes, I always notice a coumarine facet. It reminds me of lentisque.
Yes, and also to soften the sourness of the citrus. Ninfeo is a fake fresh. It starts with citrus, but very quickly, it tips into softness, milkiness and suave notes.
I couldn’t tell. We do what we feel like doing. Maybe we’re changing.
That our stuff was too well-mannered…
Oh, I don’t know about that… I’ve always thought that Songes was a little less well-mannered… You’re right though, perfumes like Passion or Grand Amour are very “chic lady”, but there’s always something a bit…
That might also be because we’ve discovered new raw materials. There’s an ingredient I’m using right now that I might be mastering better than before.
Possibly. I’m not aware of it. Actually, we don’t ask ourselves too many questions… We’re influenced by the music we listen to. Right now I’m listening to NTM [a French rap band], I don’t know what’ll come out of that!
I might not present the after-effects of NTM to Goutal!
Exactly. It might be more for Les Nez… Not that we’re not allowed to do what we want to do for Goutal. But let’s say the work resonates differently. René [Schifferlé, the owner of Les Nez] is up for anything!
It’s like a pinch of salt.
So you could layer it with other fragrances?
Absolutely!
Let’s say I consider L’Antimatière almost more like… like a sculptor would show a sculpture, or a painter a painting… I made this perfume to show it, just like Turtle Vetiver. I put it out, but I don’t care if it’s worn or not. It’s out there, that’s all. If you wear it, we have things to say to each other. If you don’t, so be it.
Yes, it’ll happen one day! For a while, I was also very interested in the Fibonacci sequence. I thought that building a sequence of perfumes based on that idea would be fun: to offer many bottles showing a sequence of scents, with the idea of the Fibonacci sequence as a thread. There would be number one, then number two would be number one with something added, and so forth… It would be a scale.
I was always obsessed with Borges. In one of his stories, he describes a walk in an imaginary country, on a never-ending street. People walk by buildings that all seem to be of the same color. But when they turn around, they realize that in fact, they are in a scale of colors so subtly different that you can’t see them change as you’re going by. You only see they are of different shades when you turn around.
So one day, I’ll do something like that. It’ll be a performance… I don’t know where, I don’t know when… But it’ll happen!
But we haven’t touched L’Eau d’Hadrien! All we did, and that may have confused some people, was to increase the concentration a bit to satisfy those who thought it was too fleeting. We didn’t want to touch the formula, so we just increased the concentration by one or two per cent. But that was at least four years ago!
It’s crazy! And sometimes, as in this case, it is totally subjective. People tell you “it’s been reformulated”, so you smell it differently, and you’re convinced it’s different.
There’s a lot of citrus in Hadrien, a lot of natural ingredients. So there’s necessarily a tiny difference between one batch and another, an acceptable margin. If someone’s bought a bottle from a batch that’s a bit different from another one, he’ll tell himself it’s changed. And when people think it’s changed, nothing will make them change their mind! We can’t help that. All I can say is that L’Eau d’Hadrien hasn’t been tweaked!
For an infographic on the Fibonaci sequence Isabelle mentions, click here...
Thank you for this very interesting interview/discussion, Denyse (and Isabelle)! I'm nuts about my sample of Matin d'Orage (and probably headed for a full bottle). When I put it on, suddenly, I'm on the west coast of Africa during the rainy season, the morning after thunderstorms; it's clearing, but still very humid. The funny thing is I don't think it smelled like that at all, but somehow Md'O recreates that feeling. Thanks also for your beautiful review of that scent. --nozknoz
RépondreSupprimerGosh, that was amazing to read! Can I say I'm envious? I'm envious. And I want to hang out with Isabelle, she is way cool! :)
RépondreSupprimerThanks for this treat, D.
Nozknoz, I'm glad you enjoyed the interview and Matin d'orage, which I think is one of the best fragrances to have come out last year. It's very evocative, isn't it?
RépondreSupprimerDusan, Isabelle is great to hang out with indeed, relaxed, smart, easy and fun. I was only introduced briefly to Camille but she seems like a lovely person too. Next time around!
RépondreSupprimerOnce again, thanks a wonderful interview! Annick Goutal is pretty much my favourite house at the moment and has been my way 'into' florals...Songes, Tubereuse, Chevrefeuille, Matin d'Orage - all beautiful and completely wearable. I love the ad hoc approach Ms Doyen describes, that each scent is developed through a combination of instinct and realism according to what feels 'right'.
RépondreSupprimerAnd then fig is a favourite note of mine, so I'm really looking forward to trying Ninfeo Mio :)
Parfymerad, I find it fascinating to see how differently perfumers explain their creative process... There's something very unpretentious and down-to-earth about Isabelle's way of talking and working, which belies the sophistication of her compositions.
RépondreSupprimerAs you may know, I'm a huge Songes lover too!
wow. reading that exchange really made my morning. these types of interviews & articles make me feel so hopeful and inspired.
RépondreSupprimeryou have done this on numerous occasions during the past year, Denyse, and I thank you for that.
the golden ratio applied to perfumery- so fun to think about!
Just a lovely interview and quite informative. Thanks!
RépondreSupprimerDea, thank you. It was a very enjoyable discussion -- but then, the perfumers I meet are always fascinating people...
RépondreSupprimerThank you Cyndi!
RépondreSupprimerI've always loved Goutal, as a house and a company, and now I have more reason to do so.
RépondreSupprimerAnd am laughing at myself for being one of the EdH panickers...
Alyssa, it *is* a great house because it's got a soul, and that soul is the people who make the perfumes.
RépondreSupprimerAlthough that one's probably not for me, what a lovely interview! Isabelle seems to be rather unpretentious, which isn't what most perfumers comes across as.
RépondreSupprimerOops, I should have read the other comments before posting - at least I'm glad we agree on her pretentiousness!
RépondreSupprimerAnd it's very true AG's a house with a soul.
K., hi ma belle, it's been such a long time! Isabelle is really unpretentious, you're right, but very, very bright. I like it that she doesn't make up answers when she doesn't have them.
RépondreSupprimerWhat a fascinating woman! Excellent interview and a joy to read. Thank you!
RépondreSupprimerDonna
Thanks, Donna.
RépondreSupprimerThis was such a fascinating read, and I particularly was interested in what Isabelle said about EH and reformulation. I just wish other perfume people would be a bit more honest about the fact that not every batch will be alike for various reasons. And I just loved the story about Ninfeo. Merci!
RépondreSupprimerJillie
What a great interview of Isabelle ,where you can find her with all her facettes.
RépondreSupprimerAs the sculptor friend who gave her and Camille some citron wood from Sri Lanka to burn on charcoal ,I can add that it is Satinwood( Chroroxylon swietiana)
Jillie, you're welcome!
RépondreSupprimerChemin Faisant, thank you for that piece of information! I'd always thought satinwood was a fantasy note -- I suppose it is in perfumery, if not in botany!
RépondreSupprimerWell, this was fascinating. I know you know how much I loved the fragrance and have been wearing it. And to read this review was a great treat. So nice to know about Hadrien! I'd never bought a bottle (contenting myself with spraying it on occasionally in the store) and now I'm satisfied.
RépondreSupprimerMarch, some people apparently find it... boxwoody. But that doesn't scare us, does it?
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