Viktor
& Rolf’s new fragrance is called Bonbon
(I’ll give you a moment to consider whether this rings any bells. Ok, time up:
piece of cake, right?). I haven’t smelled it yet. Though it might be terrific, somehow one feels that’s not
the point. It’ll smell like candy, and sell
like it, one imagines, to the tween sisters of Flowerbombers.
The point
is: like Maison Martin Margiela, Viktor & Rolf the fashion brand is owned
by Diesel (wholly for MMM, partly for V&R); the perfume license is handled
by L’Oréal. When both houses started out, they were so conceptual they belonged
more in art galleries than on the runway. In fact, V & R did present their
two first shows in galleries, in 1994 and 1995: their first “scent”, in 1996,
was an equally conceptual limited edition that was impossible to open.
While
Margiela pursued the “anonymous” stance of its founder with (Untitled), whose notes reflected a
distinctly niche-y option, Viktor & Rolf went commercial with Flowerbomb. “We are not interested in niche”, Viktor Horsting declared. “Fashion is already for a small audience. We
like to communicate with as many people as possible.” (quote sourced via
Now Smell This)
This doesn’t
necessarily express a disconnect with the duet’s arty sartorial style. Nor is
it merely filthy lucre. Rather, it might come under the equivocal “play the
system to expose its bag of tricks (while making a neat profit)” strategy -- "Good business is the best art",
Andy Warhol famously stated.
Take Flowerbomb:
powerful sillage + “girls like flowers” + fruitchouli = literal translation of
market codes. Though the grenade-shaped bottle is provocative, the scent itself
ticks all the right commercial boxes. Eau
Mega similarly took the aquatic fruity floral codes literally. Spicebomb was admittedly more original
(and at least it wasn’t a fougère), but it sprang from the same
literal-mindedness if we go by Rolf Snoeren’s statement to Women’s Wear Daily: “We felt that if flowers were a very
typical feminine scent, spices were the masculine opposite.” (also found
on NST)
The names
of two artists beloved of behemoth luxury company art foundations spring to
mind here: Takashi Murakami and Jeff Koons. The latter mostly, if he were
somehow cloned à la Gilbert &
George and had a three-way with a Barbie doll: the Bonbon bottle’s pop aesthetics expresses a Koonsian, childlike bent
for shiny pink things.
When Candy came out, it seemed like an ironic
move by the hyper avant-garde-aware Miuccia Prada – I called it “an equivalent of L’Eau
Serge Lutens: a way of being where you’re least expected, of breaking the
routine. And, in Miuccia’s case, of displaying the undercurrent of bad taste –
which is still taste – that
runs through her work.”
Bonbon is more of a Shia LaBeouf-ish effort, but done
in such a gleefully blatant way, down to the color scheme, that it somehow
enters another realm, exposing the most widespread practice in the perfume
industry (one need look no further than L’Oréal’s riffing on Flowerbomb with La Vie est Belle). And not caring a jot if its wrapping is showing.
And by the
way: bonbon is
French argot for a lady’s pink bits. Check out where that bottle is stuck on
the gift-wrapped naked model in Inez and Vinoodh’s ad… Tom Ford channeling Hello Kitty? (do click on the link of this clever, sadly no longer active fashion blog).
Illustrations: Bonbon ad and Jeff Koons' Balloon Venus featured in a Dom Perignon ad.
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