"I say: a flower! and, apart from the oblivion to which my voice relegates any contour, understood as something other than the known calyxes, musically there arises, idea itself and pleasant, the flower absent from all bouquets"
The French poet Stéphane Mallarmé, who wrote
those lines, is said to be hermetic. And
though Jean-Claude Ellena’s style veers more towards Apollonian clarity, Jour d’Hermès
remains something of an enigma. No notes. No “known calyx”.
Jour d’Hermès is placed under the sign of dawn,
which the French have two words for. Aube
comes from “white”. Aurore was once
thought to spring from the same origin as the Latin for “gold”. Homer’s
rosy-fingered Eos, whose tears are morning dew, wears a saffron robe
embroidered with flowers. Add a bit of green, and you’ve got enough colors to form a bouquet, stems overlapping to form a helix,
propelling floral sprays into the air.
A sour splash of lemon on heady floral flesh:
magnolia? Round green juiciness, like apple yet not apple… tip of the tongue…
pear, the olfactory cousin of rose, offered up to our gnosis? (Gnōthi
seautón, “know
thyself”, read the inscription on Apollo’s temple in Delphi – but it’s so hard
to know what our nose knows…). And so it goes: sweet pea, which is
all at once orange blossom, rose and carnation? The delicate fruity greenness
of gardenia, without the mushroomy rot. Something salty, definitely (ylang,
lily, carnation?). A green, snapped-stem moistness that seems to be trending at
the moment (it’s been obsessing me for months and I’ve smelled it in two other future
launches). A tinge of orange-blossom soapiness. And then an underlying,
sexy-skin softness – balsams, musk: Ellena can
do sensuous – in fact, I suspect his famously concise style is his way of
harnessing a tremendous appetite and curiosity (in his Diary of a Nose, he states he enjoys and enjoys playing with “indecent”, “disturbing” smells).
When he has obtained the scent he wants, Ellena
will not alter the formula to make it more long-lasting, but he is entirely
capable of creating a fragrance that unfurls on skin for hours. Thus, Jour d’Hermès
is tenacious and strongly radiant (it garners spontaneous compliments), yet it
is also stealthy, playfully – or perversely? – flying under the radar of
identification...
When you speak of the fragrance of certain
flowers with perfumers, they’ll often explain that once removed from its source
and bottled, it would come off like an undefined bouquet. In this case, JCE has
inverted the process like the finger of a glove, skirting perilously round the
the mille-fleurs (a name once given
to the mixed leftovers of various fragrances sold cheaply to poorer markets) to
achieve a conundrum. As though he had created a hollowed-out form from which
any flower could spring like a hologram, which turns out to be his very intention,
according to the press material:
“I wanted to offer armfuls of flowers to smell, people could put in their own choice of flowers, smell what they wanted to smell.”So: “let it be a thousand flowers! Armfuls, bouquets, sprays, garden flowers, cut flowers, morning flowers, evening flowers, mischievous fragrances, bewitching smells, a whole profusion!”
“I like to leave voids, ‘blanks’ in perfumes so that everyone can add their own imaginary world; they are ‘voids of appropriation’”, he explains in his Diary of a Nose (my translation).
Jour d’Hermès is therefore a matter of hermeneutics, to be interpreted like
Pythian prophecies; but also, a perfume to be performed (in French, you say “interpret” to express this action). What makes a perfume live is the fact that it is worn, rewritten by the
wearer into her own story: the peculiar alchemy (Hermes Trismegistus) between
skin, air and soul. In Jour d’Hermès, this performance/interpretation
is literally written into the concept.
Jour d’Hermès will
available in Hermès boutiques as of Saturday December 1st, and will launch in all other points of sale on
February 15th 2013.
In order to take the “perfume
performance”concept a step further, I will be drawing three samples of the
scent: once the winners have had the opportunity of testing them, I’ll publish
their interpretation.
The draw will be open until Friday December 7th.
Just drop a comment, and I’ll announce the results of the draw on Monday
December 10th.
Illustration: the goddess Flora in a detail from Botticelli's Birth of Venus.