The 19th of July was Mona di Orio’s birthday and bloggers and writers across the electronic ether again reminded us that the perfumed world is a far less interesting place since Mona’s premature death at the end of 2011.
I am the
same age and feel the loss oddly. Sitting here in my sun-flooded Edinburgh
kitchen, I simply cannot imagine not being here, doing this, creating, writing and
I have nowhere near the talent and artistic power that flowed from Mona. The
more I wear her creations, the more I realise how close to genius she was in
her instinctual understanding of olfactive chiaroscuro.
Her
perfumes oscillate between light and dark, illuminating the shadows but at the
same time masking and veiling, keeping certain things hidden from us. This
tilting of the light away from the face
or main theme, of allowing us to see the edges and hinterlands of compositions; this is her legacy. No one understood the nuances of light and shade like Mona, you
can smell the tonal shifts, feel the luminescence on your skin and the bruises
of night. There are times when we all need drama, majesty and true luxury in
our fragrances. This is when we turn to Mona de Orio.
I worry
it is early to say this, and you must forgive any offence, but her premature
death has also I think deepened an already very powerful sense of connection to
Mona’s work. There is an aura of ownership and enhanced familiarity. The people
around the world who have worn her scents feel her absence keenly and draw her
creations around themselves like protective charms. I am aware of her loss each
time I wear one of her beautiful creations. I am sure she would have been
troubled by this sense of melancholia as her work was a celebration of life and
nature it all its glory. But we sense what we sense. The poems of Plath, Lowell
and Brooke, the films of Monroe, Dean and Jean Vigo, the music of Buckley and
Morrison, the art of Basquiat and Schiele, the lives of Princesses Diana and
Grace – we imbue these with a different colour of memory. Tragedy bestows nostalgia
and absence reinforcing our connections to those that have gone before their
time.
It is
always bittersweet. At the peak or on the cusp of artistic or creative greatness,
we can never really know how much was to come, how much glory was to follow. In
the case of Mona, a parfumeuse
operating at the peak of her powers, the loss is incomparable. Only those
closest to her know what she was preparing to do. Jeroen Oude Sogtoen was left not
only with the painful task of coping with the loss of a beloved friend and business
partner but also the looming issue of continuance. How to carry on with the perfumed
work with Mona gone? However he has managed very successfully to keep Mona’s
memory alive while at the same time necessitating movement forward. Transition
is painful and forces introspection and change, but it is necessary in order to
survive.