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~ No one rejects the gift of fragrance, except the obtuse (ʿAlī b. Abī Ṭālib )

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Archivi tag: Jean-Claude Ellena

Ellena on solitude and creativity – A diffuse review of The Diary of a Nose II

22 sabato Nov 2014

Posted by oveis in Book Reviews, Musings

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Companionship, Henry Corbin, Jean-Claude Ellena, Research, Solitude, Sufism, Teamwork

One of the most comforting things that I am learning through reading The Diary of a Nose is that even great noses tinker. They go about doing their job through a trial and error process the exact same way as I do. Now, putting together a formula, blending the ingredients and finding out that you have to start again from scratch because the result sucks, can be depressing. Knowing that the likes of Ellena sometimes happen to ditch a draft because, well, they think it sucks, gives you hope.

This image of Ellena smelling his drafts, evaluating them and ultimately judging them unworthy to survive evoked in me the idea of the delicate relationship that governs every creative undertaking, suspended in between solitude and teamwork.

There are two things that the French philosopher and historian of religion Henry Corbin would remind time and again in nearly all of his writing. The first was how, vis-à-vis the abyss of the monde imaginal, ‘historical criticism loses its rights’. It was Corbin’s elegant way to claim for himself the right to treat the visionary experience in religions as a fact, a mantra he disseminated his work with as a reminder of his own brand of phenomenology. The second is his evocation of the years of study under Etienne Gilson at the Religious Science Section of the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, and the elating experience of reading and interpreting the primary sources with him: Gilson would read straight from Latin and the extraction of the meaning was a collective effort, an inexhaustible process whereby the study group would make the text itself alive and speaking centuries after its redaction.

Intelligence, I got to think, pondering the image of Gilson evoked by Corbin, is the result of a collective effort – no significant achievement can be obtained in total solitude. I think, among many other examples, about the Sufi concept of ṣuḥba, or about the many (and cruel) experiments conducted over history in which a human being was left living in total isolation from all social interactions (they would not survive for long, if you were wondering). But – and here’s where Ellena’s account of his working in isolation comes in – companionship and teamwork have to be balanced out with individual, and to some extent secluded, work; and there you go – Sufi ṣuḥba balanced out by khalwa, the solitary retreat, usually lasting forty days. Ellena, who made the choice of working away from the decision-making centre of the company he is head perfumer of, admits that “the majority of ideas are the fruit of day-to-day work, sometimes the result of meeting people, country walks, idle strolls, readings, moments when the mind is free to roam”. That is to say, a balanced combination of solitude and interaction. I know it can be a luxury. I remember the couple of years after my PhD when I was an “independent researcher” (a self-reassuring way to say that you’re looking for a job in academia), and the frustration of working away from colleagues, removed from the informal exchange of ideas, inspiration and criticism that you need to produce anything meaningful.

So, yes, I guess that what I wanted to say is that, as a perfumer, I am now somewhere on the solitary side of the creative process and, although I cherish it as it allows me to work out my own way and style with relative tranquillity, my own interaction with fellow perfumers, with few illustrious exceptions, is probably too limited at the moment, and this is something that needs to change. My fragrant khalwa needs its share of ṣuḥba.

Making love to words, or a diffuse book review of Jean Claude Ellena’s The Diary of a Nose

23 giovedì Ott 2014

Posted by oveis in Book Reviews, Stories

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Tag

Book Reviews, Grasse, Jean-Claude Ellena, Love, Mediterranean, Mediterraneo, Recensioni

Long and ambitious title for a blog post that comes after a long silence, huh? Thing is, I was carried away by sudden slew of ideas and inspirations as I started reading The Diary of a Nose this morning on the bus, so I thought I should cautiously get back to my blog, maybe writing shorter posts rather than lengthy articles that require time, research and labor limae.

I have not been totally idle, fragrance wise. While I’m still struggling to get my book finished (okay, I promise I won’t mention that anymore, it’s becoming pathetic), I’ve been working in the evenings and in the weekends on a couple of challenging custom projects and on the launch of my own non-custom brand. So, I’ve been busy with design, logo, labels etc., and this is the big news. I am still at pains with the refinement of the concept, as crystallising a whole creative approach into visuals and few words, in a way that is both genuine and commercially appealing, is all except straightforward.

Anyway, I’ve been skipping pleasure reading for a while, but I realised that for some reason I wasn’t reading at all in my commute, not even the pile of academic articles that I keep carrying in my bag for that exact purpose. So, I picked one of the three books I had bought from Amazon quite a few moths ago, intended for leisure reading, and read a few chapters. Inspired by almost every single paragraph, I decided to review it on the blog (1).

Pleasure reads

Pleasure reads (underneath, although equally pleasant, my work reads)

But hey, the inspirations were too many to handle, and I thought that my poor weak memory would have better managed a ‘diffuse review’, that is a review in installments – more of a random array of thoughts scattered with no particular order throughout the blog than a proper review. Continua a leggere →

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BS in Islamic Studies

A study room for BS Honours

bgirl rhapsody

Perfume... and Stuff

Il senso perfetto

di odori improbabili e puzze (im)possibili

Ballandalus

Cor prudens possidebit scientiam

Aroma Folio

by Lemon Wedge

در کوچه های بیدخت

یادی از بیدخت قدیم

Paradiso Perduto Venezia

Osteria & Jazz Club

The Digital Orientalist

Practical examples and theoretical reflections on the do's and don'ts of using digital tools for your study and research in African and Asian Studies.

Sunnitalia

Tradizione Islamica in lingua italiana

Chemist in the Bottle

Perfume reviews from fragrance evaluator

NUR

Ottavia Massimo © all rights reserved

A Perfumed Pilgrimage

A scented journey from Canada to Grasse.

Perfume in Progress

behind the scenes at sonomascentstudio.com

un blog malin-comico

ho detto sì all'amore ma non avevo capito la domanda

আলাল ও দুলাল | ALAL O DULAL

আলাল যদি ডাইনে যায় দুলাল যায় বামে

Gianni De Martino

No one rejects the gift of fragrance, except the obtuse (ʿAlī b. Abī Ṭālib )

Kafkaesque

Lane Lexicon

KEIN PFUSCH, BITTE!

No one rejects the gift of fragrance, except the obtuse (ʿAlī b. Abī Ṭālib )

mauriziopolese.wordpress.com/

Il blog di Maurizio Polese

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