Amouage: The Geometry of Time

The intersection of haute perfumery and theoretical physics has yielded a trilogy of fragrances from Omani house Amouage

From Physics to Fragrance: Time as Geometric Structure

Rather than traditional perfumery narratives, Amouage’s creative director Renaud Salmon has anchored new scents in geometric concepts that represent time’s fundamental structure. Salmon’s approach to the second Essences trilogy moves beyond conventional temporal metaphors. “I wanted to consider time in a more profound way, reflecting on how it forms part of the very structure of everything around us,” he explains. This led him to the fields of physics and geometry, where time exists not merely as a sequential measure, but as a force intrinsically linked to physical reality — a boundary between the known world and realms we can only intuit.

The conceptual framework translates abstract geometric forms into olfactory compositions: a straight line, a point, and a circle. Each shape carries its own temporal significance and has been interpreted by a different perfumer.

Line 618: The Golden Ratio and Infinite Balance in Perfumery

Perfumer Nathalie Lorson was tasked with representing linear progression toward infinity. The resulting fragrance, Line 618, takes its name from the golden ratio (1.618), a mathematical constant that appears throughout nature and underpins harmonious proportions in art and design.

Lorson’s composition follows the principle of infinite balance. Black pepper and pineapple open the fragrance in unexpected combination—the fruit’s facets creating counterpoint to the spice’s explosive character. Heliotrope and pine extend this contrast on a broader scale, mixing almond-like, floral, and green-citrus notes. The base of sandalwood, patchouli, and leather drives toward a perpetually unreachable olfactory horizon, maintaining equilibrium throughout.

Remain: Exploring Singularity and Temporal Origin in Fragrance

The point, though the smallest geometric representation, carries the greatest potency as the origin from which all other forms emerge. Perfumer Pierre Negrin interpreted this concept of singularity—a single instant existing within all that follows it.

Remain opens with immediate intensity: pimento berry and mandarin establish presence, before frankincense connects this spark to historical structures. Jasmine, ylang ylang, lily, and vanilla expand the moment’s impact, while the base notes of ambergris, guaiac wood, patchouli, and castoreum anchor the composition to primordial origins—the point from which time itself emerges.

Sequence: Cyclical Time and the Circle in Olfactory Form

Julien Rasquinet created Sequence to embody the circle, a form of deep symbolic resonance used for millennia to express cycles. The fragrance opens with lychee and raspberry providing optimistic energy, while saffron introduces a leathery note that becomes central to the composition’s architecture.

Rose and tonka bean add luxury and solemnity as the circle rotates. Osmanthus, with its pronounced leather facet, creates direct linkage back to the opening saffron. Oud and ambery woods push toward greater depth, transforming initial lightheartedness into authoritative wisdom. An elegant leather note echoes both osmanthus and saffron, creating a leitmotif across the entire fragrance—reflecting the cycle from beginning to end and back again.

The Technical Innovation: Dual Infusion and Six-Month Aging Process

What distinguishes the Essences collection technically is a six-month dual infusion process. The fragrance concentrates are infused with aged Australian sandalwood chips of exceptional quality, while the dilution alcohol simultaneously undergoes infusion in artisanal French oak barrels crafted by Allary. This extended temporal process reveals facets in the fragrances that would otherwise remain hidden—an intangible but undeniable patina of sophistication.

The parallel is deliberate: just as understanding time reveals previously invisible aspects of the physical world, time granted to this complex dual infusion process brings forth hidden dimensions in the compositions.

Fragrance Concentration and Raw Material Composition

All three fragrances are formulated at 30% pure perfume concentration and aged for six months. The raw materials include:

Line 618: Hojari frankincense, black pepper, pineapple, peach, plum, pine, heliotrope, coconut milk, patchouli, sandalwood, guaiac wood, leather

Remain: Hojari frankincense, mandarin, pimento berry, bergamot, Madonna lily, ylang ylang, juniper, jasmine, ambergris, guaiac wood, patchouli, vanilla, tonka bean

Sequence: Lychee, raspberry, saffron, rose, osmanthus, tonka bean, oud, leather, ambery woods

Visual Language: Brutalist Design and Geometric Bottle Architecture

The presentation extends the geometric concept through brutalist-inspired visual compositions by artist Louise Mertens. Bronze-colored sculptural monoliths mirror the fragrances’ geometric identities and function as physical expressions of time’s structure. The custom Essences bottle features vertical grooves evoking Omani desert dunes from the front, while viewed from above it reproduces Amouage’s iconic twelve-pointed emblem.

The three fragrances will be available in Italy exclusively through Olfattorio Bar à Parfums from the end of January, priced at €420 for 100ml bottles.

  • Amouage, Line 618
  • Amouage, Remain
  • Amouage, Sequence

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