Dutch fashion designer Lilian
Driessen launched her triptych of MariaLux fragrances in 2012. The perfumer is her husband the avant-gardist scent-creator Alessandro Gualtieri, aka The Nose a genuine Italian eccentric who
launched and created the cult Nasamotto range of sleek and enigmatic scents
including the crystalline Narcotic Venus and the indelible, pungent reek of
Black Afgano. I know so many people that love this dark druggy formulation
and shops that sell it struggle to keep it in stock, but I’m very uncomfortable
with its suffocating herbal reek on my skin. Now I think Gualtieri’s technique
and imagination is magical, I love the glassy, slow neo-gardenia intoxication
of Narcotic Venus and the explosive machismo
of Duro, but Black Afgano and me… no, never gonna work, it chews at my senses
like a rabid dog and makes the blood vessels in my brain expand to breaking
point. But as ever with such complex scent-making.. each to their own druggy, smoky
darkness.
The creativity surging back
and forth between Driessen and Gualtieri must be quite awe-inspiring. The couple
are based in Amsterdam and Lilian has also masterminded a trio of unique fragrance-selling
spaces, Avery Fine Perfumery in
London, Modena and New Orleans.
I have a special connection to the London boutique,
as it was the subject of my very first Silver Fox blog piece back in June 2011.
I went in and immersed myself in the Avery/aviary
experience, sampling beautiful fragrances from The Dressing Table, an ornate
set of deep drawers set on anthropomorphic bird feet, hding bottles of beautifully
curated scents
‘Perfume is volatile, like a
bird,’ Driessen once said.
I was introduced scent by
carefully chosen scent by a wonderful sales consultant until we found Atelier d’Artiste by Nez à Nez, the
sadly now discontinued brand by Stephane Humbert Luca. The scenting of a black
feather, the distinctive tissue, and the airy sound of birdsong as I shopped
made for a strange and beguiling experience, one I have never forgotten. And one
I always remembered very time I wore that extraordinary blend of woods, paint,
turpentine, brandy, tobacco and fruit. At the time I had no idea who was behind
Avery, I just loved the concept. They stocked a unique selection of perfumes
and candles and enjoyed a prestige word of mouth reputation among the perfume cognoscenti.