I've been so busy with my multiple other lives that it's been near-impossible to post regularly this spring. However, today I'm featuring a guest post by my friend Gail, who blogs throughout the perfume world under the name AZAR. Here's what she has to say:
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Oscar
de la Renta's series of fragrances entitled the "Essential Luxuries
Collection" is available exclusively at Macy's. I have
sampled the entire line, found them all rather pleasant, and promptly forgotten
what they smell like. But the name of the series keeps returning to my
mind. There is something disturbing
about the slogan and the faux exclusivity that goes beyond the simple-minded
dichotomy of the advertising message, reflecting social values and conjuring up
images of starving French peasants and aristocratic parasites stuffing
themselves with cake. The idea of "Essential Luxuries" has prompted
me to reflect on my own obsession with fragrance, the nature of what society
perceives as luxury and with issues of morality, economics and social justice.
Pondering
"Essential Luxuries" led me to the new perfumes from
"Nomad". Their website "NomadTwoWorlds" proclaims that they have discovered "Meaningful Luxury" and are proud to
announce that "We partner with indigenous and marginalized artists and
communities around the world to bring you culturally inspired products and art”
WOW! A gold mine! A politically correct
and at the same time sustainable form of exploitation!
Nomad
Two Worlds is pulling out all the stops for this venture, contracting the nose
of world renowned perfumer Harry Fremont, the power of the Clinton Global
Initiative, and every bit of market research they can muster "to assist in
the commercialization of novel ingredients and to champion and showcase these
ingredients to our consumer market…" no doubt with the helping hand and
bankroll of Firminich, their proclaimed partner. Is this the kind of green luxury that has a
purpose (other than making money) or luxury that I can feel good about? Nomad's marketing not only packs the
insider/outsider - I am better that you are - punch but also brings in the
perceived value of precious obscurity utilizing current trends in green product
marketing. How can I possibly trust
Nomad's intentions when all they appear to be doing is resurrecting a business
model from the days of empire? [see Ellen's footnote]
Vladas
Griskevicius of the University of Minnesota's Carlson School of Management has this to say: "Green
purchases are often motivated by status…Many green purchases are rooted in the
evolutionary
idea of competitive altruism, the notion that people compete for status by
trying to appear more altruistic." Unfortunately this competitive altruism
in the purchase of "Meaningful Luxury" seems no more than a ploy to
use our own insecurities against the very people we mean to support.
So
why does the advertising slogan "Essential Luxuries" in reference to
perfume bother me so much? Is there some residual guilt about owning something
as "useless" as a lovely scent?
Is it that I see relatively expensive fragrances giving some consumers
the illusion that their noses are more refined than the snouts of the rabble
who buy and use celebrity frags? Does over-priced perfume work like an
invisible shield keeping inferior noses (now which noses are those?) at an
intellectual distance and, like the understated logo on a $3000.00 handbag,
help the beautiful people recognize one other?
Ranting
usually helps me clarify my thoughts. I
know that I don't buy many of the so-called luxury items simply because I can't
afford their embarrassing prices and because I don't need these possessions as
a logo, a shield or a validation of my humanity. Expensive clutter and overpriced experiences
are not essential to a beautiful life. I
am old and I see the real essential luxury as simply the time to enjoy my life,
comfortably, without excess, free from worry about money, status, power, style,
schedules, timelines and manufactured responsibilities.
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[Ellen’s
Footnote: Besides the issues mentioned by Azar, I find that a big turn-off with
Nomad’s PR approach is their use of a Scandinavian-looking model in various
conditions of semi-nudity and being smeared with dirt, apparently suggesting
that the people they are helping are naked, dirty savages, but that hiring a
blonde, blue-eyed model to play their role somehow helps those with the money
relate to them. Nomad is by no means the first company to play the “feel-good
and help the noble savage” card, a rationalization that has been used for all manner of purposes throughout the history of colonialism. A few years ago DKNY boasted that
their “Pure” perfume contained “one drop of vanilla” sourced from poor farmers
in Uganda. The significance of a single drop was hard to figure out, but it
probably was truth in advertising masquerading as extreme rarity and exoticism,
while at the same time promoting feelings of superiority and altruism and, of course making money for DKNY. At least the Oscar de la Renta campaign is bland and inoffensive, and doesn't make any pretense of being a charity operation.]
[Photos taken from various commercial websites]