Élisabeth de Feydeau explained

Élisabeth de Feydeau
Birth Name:Mabille de Poncheville
Birth Date:1966 7, df=y
Birth Place:Mauriac, Cantal, France
Other Names:Élisabeth de Feydeau de Saint-Christophe
Occupation:Historian, writer
Alma Mater:Sorbonne
Awards:Chevalier de l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres

Élisabeth de Feydeau (born 28 July 1966), is a French historian and writer. She is also an expert in fragrance.

Biography

Élisabeth de Feydeau de Saint-Christophe,[1] born Mabille de Poncheville, is the granddaughter of André Mabille de Poncheville, a French poet and writer, and the great-granddaughter of Georges Vidor, a shipowner. Of this family legacy, she developed from an early age a taste for writing, history, and French culture.

At sixteen, she discovered the emotional power of fragrance when she first smelt L'heure bleue by Guerlain, which she instant fell in love with. Ever since, she has felt intensely for the world of fragrances, which for her echoed the world of music, and the piano pieces she had studied when she was a child.

After a doctorate in history, she became a member of the commission responsible for cultural affairs at the fashion firms Chanel and Bourjois. She established and managed the departments there, acquiring her first basic knowledge of the raw materials for fragrance.

After this experience, she decided, in 1997, to found her own firm, "Arty Fragrance", where she started working as a consultant for olfactory and cultural development. She moved on to work for prestigious names in the world of fragrance-making: among others, Jean-Paul Gaultier, Chanel, Christian Dior Perfume, L'Oréal Paris, and also Guerlain.

She continued her fundamental research work fragrance and wrote books about it: Jean-Louis Fargeon, perfumer of Marie-Antoinette (2005), L'Herbier de Marie-Antoinette (2012), Les Parfums, histoire, dictionnaire, anthologie (2011), Les 101 mots du parfums (2013)...

Today a well-known expert on perfume, she has been acknowledged as such by famous, high-profile perfume companies. Since 1998, she has been teaching at the "School of Fragrances", in Versailles.

She has put up several exhibitions, such as "Parfums de Promenade", in the "Galerie des Galeries" (Galeries Lafayette, 2001) and at "La Cour des Senteurs de Versailles" (2013). She has also animated workshops and conferences all around the world, particularly in Francophone countries.

In 2011, she introduced the brand "Arty Fragrance by Elisabeth de Feydeau", where she created and commercialized a more confidential line of perfumes, all inspired by the luxury and sophistication of the French 17th and 18th centuries, such as they could be felt, more than anywhere else, at the Château de Versailles: she has often wandered around in the Park of Versailles, while doing research work for her books. In 2006, she was chosen by the rose-breeder Meilland to be godmother to the new rose called "Petit Trianon", along with another perfume-maker, Francis Kurkdjian, with whom she had just recreated the fragrance of French queen Marie-Antoinette: Le Sillage de la Reine.

Since 2008, she has been holding a blog where she regularly publishes articles about perfumes, perfume-makers – and, in a more general way, about the world of perfumes.

Distinctions

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Elisabeth de Feydeau, la passion du parfum . de Noblet . Christel . Madame . 39 . March 2014 . 12 October 2017 . issuu.