Posts filed under 'Featured Perfumer'

Interview With Perfumer Francis Kurkdjian

A little while back I did a post on one of my favorite perfumers, Francis Kurkdjian. Ever since then, I’ve been on pins and needles about doing an interview with him, and I can’t even tell you how excited I am to share it with you today. Thank you to Monsieur Kurkdjian for taking the time to share a bit of his brilliant mind (and nose) with us, perfume fanatics!

1. Was there a specific moment when you knew you wanted to be a perfumer, and what/when was it?
I wanted to follow the path of both my grandparents in fashion and couture but I don’t know how to draw. At the age of 16 I therefore decided to become a perfumer because, in its spirit, perfume is to me the closest métier to fashion.

2. What profession would you have gone into had you taken an alternate route in life?
Architect? Restorer? Archaeologist? Ballet dancer? Who knows! But no one knows what the future is made of.

3. Your fragrances seem to have a definite association with a particular color palette. Are you inspired by particular visual images or even specific palettes?
I am not sure I agree with what you said. When you look through my work from Le Male in 1995 until the new Ungaro fragrance for women or “For Him” by Narciso Rodriguez that will launch this fall, I am not sure one can say they are inspired or driven by one specific palette.

4. If you could have a dinner party with guests from any period in history, who would you invite?
If I was hosting a dinner party I would invite: singer Maria Callas, painter Pablo Picasso, dancer Anna Pavlova, scientist Isaac Newton, philosopher Blaise Pascal, and spy-courtisane Mata Hari!

5. Do you have a mentor? The works of which perfumers do you admire and why?
During my training (3 months) at Quest International (now Givaudan) I have taught perfumery with Olivier Cresp and during my first year I have worked under the guidance of Christopher Sheldrake (now at Chanel), Maurice Roucel (now at Symrise), Noel Guillot, and Gilles Romey. Then during my career at Quest I had the pleasures to work with Françoise Caron, Calice Becker, and Christine Nagel. I like the work of Annick Ménardo and Dominque Ropion today.

6. What are your favorite perfumes?
Must by Cartier, No 5 by Chanel, Eau d’Orange Verte by Hermès, and Eau de Rochas.

7. You have your own atelier of perfumes. What are the typical or unusual fragrance requests?
French artist Sophie Calle asked me to create the smell of money a few years ago. I have also created perfumes for baby shower parties, weddings, etc.

8. What other things are you passionate about in life, and how do they affect your perfume creations?
I play the piano. Enjoy ballet and music concerts. Art exhibitions. But what I enjoy the most is spending time with my friends.

9. You seem to have a way with rose (Indult Isvaraya, Parfums MDCI creations, Lady Vengeance, Rose Barbare). In my perception, your rose based scents are full-bodied, voluptuous, sort of femme fatale. Is that your favorite note to work with?
Rose is not my favourite note to work with. It happens I used it many times over the past two years because it was the right note to use to depict and create the emotions I wanted to reproduce from the projects I was given to work on.

10. What perfume notes in your opinion are not used enough these days and why?
Leather notes are not very commercial so they are not used very often. Bel Ami by Hermès is a one of my favourite perfumes as well.

11. You work on so many versatile projects like the Paris Opera perfume, Sillage de la Reine, Papier d’Armenie… what other interesting projects would you like to take on?
I have worked again for the Castle of Versailles and the show goes during all the month of August (to visit the online page, click here). I have many projects going on for next fall and I will keep you posted…

12. What would you recommend any perfume aficionado that they should do at least once in their lifetime?
Maybe going to Iran to see the rose harvest when the sun rises….

13 comments July 30th, 2007

Featured Perfumer: Francis Kurkdjian

There’re several perfumers whose works I adore (Olivia Giacobetti, Pierre Bourdon, Michel Roudnitska, to name a few) but there’s only one who resonates with me the most - Francis Kurkdjian. Not only is he exceptionally gifted but also quite renown for his young age - the author of such a big hit as Le Male by Jean Paul Gaultier at the mere age of 25 and the recipient of the Francois Coty Prize for Lifetime Achievement as a perfume designer. All the awards aside, Francis Kurkdjian to me is first and foremost an artist whose creations touch me on a personal level and reciprocate - I love them, and they love me back. To borrow the quote from his web site - “perfume as a work of art is a transmitted expression of intimacy”.

French of Armenian heritage, Francis Kurkdjian learned perfumery at the International Institute of Perfume, Cosmetics and Flavors and has worked at Quest International and Takasago (a leading Japanese fragrance company). In 2001, he created his own atelier of custom made perfumes. If I could ever afford to have a custom perfume made for me, he’d be my perfumer of choice (a girl can dream).

I have categorized Francis Kurkdjian’s creations into two main groups: The Glorious Rose and Something Completely Different.

The Glorious Rose: I absolutely adore what he does with the rose. In my pre-Kurkdjian years, my notion of a good rose perfume consisted of a true-to-life, straightforward, honeyed rose along the lines of the famous Bulgarian rose oil. Kurkdjian takes the rose for a total spin: Rose Barbare by Guerlain (a perfect modern day chypre!) is a rose with thorns and proud of it; Lady Vengeance by Juliette Has A Gun - a deeply sensual, intense rose; Rose de Siwa by Parfums MDCI - a radiant, glowing queen. I’m yet to try the new Ferre Rose by Gianfranco Ferre which promises to be a fruity-floral (yes, I know, but it’s Kurkdjian!) rose.

Something Completely Different: simply put, exploring new dimensions in perfume. The scents in this category are my ever so cherished Eau Noire and Cologne Blanche by Christian Dior, Isvaraya by Indult, and the burning papers Papier d’Armenie with the most soothing scent (incense, myrrh, vanilla). These fragrances have become part of my human existence (cheesy, I know, but there you have it), and I’ll never want to be without them.

Other Francis Kurkdjian’s creations include:

Iris Nobile by Acqua di Parma, 2004
Green Tea by Elizabeth Arden, 1999
Mania by Armani, 2002
Fragile by Jean Paul Gaultier, 1999
Fleur de Male by Jean Paul Gaultier, 2007
Miracle Homme by Lancome, 2001
Lily Chic by Escada, 2000
Rumeur by Lanvin, 2006
Kouros Cologne Sport by Yves Saint Laurent, 2004
Papier d’Armenie, 2006
Sillage de la Reine, 2006
Silver Shadow by Davidoff, 2005
Narciso Rodriguez For Her (co-signed with Christine Nagel), 2003
Narciso Rodriguez For Him, 2007

Image source: parfums-et-aromes.com

13 comments June 11th, 2007

Featured Perfumer: Olivia Giacobetti

Featured Perfumer is a new category on Aromascope inspired by an article in the June issue of the House and Garden magazine (page 52) about Olivia Giacobetti. Perfumery to me is art, the perfumer is the artist. Hence, I take deep interest and pleasure in learning more about my favorite perfumers and perfumers in general. I especially enjoy looking for distinctive, signature touches in their often diverse creations. Olivia Giacobetti is on my top 5 favorite perfumers list. What strikes me most about her fragrances is the emotional response they elicit. Be it the spicy chai latte drink of Tea For Two by L’Artisan Parfumeur, the succulent Indian dessert of Monsoon Season by Lisa Simon or the salty, wet wood of Preparation Parfumee by Andre Putman - the experience is unbelievably real and very personal. Her scents are never abstract - on the contrary, they’re often intensified interpretations of life. “But what does it take to distill the essence of a person through smell? Focus on detail. Imagination. A genius for interpreting nature.”

Olivia Giacobetti is the nose of the majority of scents in the L’Artisan Parfumeur collection (such as Navegar, Drole de Rose, Dzing!, Tea For Two, Premier Figuier, etc.) as well as Costes by Hotel Costes, Essence of John Galliano by Diptyque, En Passant by Frederic Malle, Hiris by Hermes, and others.

Image source: houseandgarden.com

20 comments May 14th, 2007


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