ÇaFleureBon Profiles in American Perfumery: Jessica Mara of L’Aventura Perfumes + The Road Less Traveled Giveaways

Jessica Mara of L'Aventura Perfumes

 Jessica Mara of L’Aventura Perfumes

 Profile: I am a born maker. I love process and exploration. I love the excitement of creation and I love the tediousness of refinement. I engage so deeply in my work/life that sometimes it’s hard for me to discern where one stops and the other starts. My family is amazing and imperfect. I was raised very outside of the norm. My parents were ideological (as opposed to lifestyle) hippies, and instilled a very strong foundation of ethics, open-mindedness and whatever is the opposite of entitlement in me. Neither of my parents were artists, but they were both very creative in their own ways, and I was raised around a lot of artists and intellectuals – a lot of people who had made their way doing unconventional things and living unconventional lifestyles.

Young Jessica Mara

We moved around a lot, so I was constantly having to adjust to new places, new schools, new people which made me adaptable and self-reliant in a lot of ways. I learned to have very little fear of strangers, the unknown, unfamiliar, and I got very good at how to “read” people and rooms. I think that moving around made me comfortable with novelty, gave me a love of travel and going places where I don’t know anyone or speak the language. It also developed into a strong interest in psychology from experiencing all the different ways people live, how they see themselves, how they view the world, and how they function (or disfunction) within it.

L'Aventura Perfumes Mothlight,Lionsin the Library, the faraway, cotillion and sanctuary

 L’Aventura Perfumes Mothlight, Sanctuary, Lions in the Library, Cotillion and The Faraway

Professionally I’ve done everything from being a working/showing artist, tending bar, silversmithing, being a business owner and a boss, working in the fashion industry, doing professional bookkeeping, working as a bespoke shoemaker and teaching shoemaking classes. Somehow all of this led to making perfume. What started very simply and as a quiet lifelong exploration in scent suddenly turned into an obsession.  As all my life experiences, all my diverse interests reflect who I am they also inform and inspire the perfumes I create. I want to create scents that surprise and delight, that are unconventional and intriguing. I want to create scents that allow an escape from where you are or take you to a place to explore.

Scents that are novel, yet familiar. Scents that conjure imaginary spaces for you to make real or remembered spaces to return to. I want to create scents that reflect my experiences and mirror people the way I see them – complex, gorgeously flawed and perfect.

L'Aventura Perfumes

Writing formulas for L’Aventura Perfumes

On American Perfumery: I love old-guard perfume, old-world wines, and old-school rock-n-roll. But I also live by the belief that if only one choice (such as more traditional or Eurocentric perfumery) is offered then there is something bad going on. Not allowing growth and expansion in any field creates dogma, natural exclusions, rules and limitations which are the death of creativity. With American perfumery, different perspectives, narratives and inclusions abound. For some reason Americans (for better and worse), are often irreverent and tend to make their own rules and (for better and worse) to get away with it. I think that’s partially because we value (for better and worse) personal expression over almost anything, and we are allowed to choose (for better and worse) our own truths and meanings. That all said, because we are inspired by the experiences of a road less traveled, American Perfumers tend to “make it their own” and forge new paths, the results are often not just your same old, but are fresh, highly creative, bold and inspiring.

And I love being a part of that.

Walt Whitman via Wikipedia

Favorite American Artist: This is the most unfair question ever. But today I am going to go with Walt Whitman. Lots to love here – wacky poetic form, an awesome mashup of humanism, transcendentalism and realism, strange symbology, overt sexuality… But really I think the reason I love him so much has more to do with the fact that he was able to show where he (and therefore give a clue to the rest of us) was standing: a glorious, undefined, ecstatic being, his persona completely indistinguishable from his work, a living, throbbing, filthy, mundane, godlike, contradictory embodiment of art and flesh and spirit that almost every one of us can identify with.

And I think that’s why he’s everywhere, not just in the arts, but everywhere – Whitman on postage stamps, postcards, and matchbook covers and in cartoons, Whitman in advertising for cigarettes, cigars, coffee, whiskey, insurance. Whitman’s name on schools, hotels, bridges, apartment buildings, summer camps, parks, truck stops, common rooms in guest houses, corporate centers, AIDS clinics, political think tanks. And, get this – back in the day, inexpensive pocket editions of Whitman were distributed to workers and farmers during the Depression, and free copies were given to the American Armed forces during World War II.

Because we resonate. We relate, deeply. We feel within ourselves a wild heart, a cosmos, that we are disorderly, fleshly, and glorious. It totally makes me want to cry yet also gives me hope.

Jessica Mara, Owner & Perfumer of L’Aventura Perfumes

www.laventuraperfumes.com

L'Aventura Perfumes Lions in the Library

L’Aventura Perfumes Lions in the Library and sample set of Mothlight, Sanctuary, Lions in the Library, Cotillion and Faraway

Thanks to Jessica, we have a draw for one 50 ml bottle of Lions in the Library and one sample set of L’Aventura’s full catalogue of five fragrances for two registered users in the US and Canada only. Register here.To enter the draw, you must be a registered reader. Please leave a comment with what you found fascinating about Jessica’s path to perfumery and where you live. Draw closes 12/16/2022

L’Aventura Perfumes Lions in The Library Notes: Labdanum, bitter orange, old books, cistus, cashmeran, civet

Jessica Mara is 171th in our American Perfumer Series, which officially began with  Dawn Spencer Hurwitz of DSH Perfumes on July 11, 2011.

L’Aventura Perfumes is now sold at the American Perfumer

All photos belong to Jessica Mara unless otherwise noted.

Please like CaFleureBon Profiles in American Perfumery and your entry will count twice (be sure to leave that in your comment).

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We announce the winners only on our site and on our Facebook page, so like ÇaFleureBon and use our blog feed…or your dream prize will be just spilled perfume.

 

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21 comments

  • Ooo…I like her! Her varied life experience makes her a Renaissance woman! Her thoughts on American Perfumers being somewhat irreverent rings true to me. Their creativity is free of how it’s supposed to be. I would be overjoyed to try L’Aventura Perfumes. The sample set would be wonderful to experience. I live in the US. Thank you for the giveaway.

  • What a lovely profile! I especially enjoyed Jessica Mara’s thoughts on Whitman: thinking about a particular art form in relation to other art forms is always revealing. I would absolutely love to try her sample set, I bet they are all wonderful.
    I’m in WV, USA

  • I loved reading Jessica Mara’s perspective. I especially enjoyed the way she discussed her love for old-guard perfume — tempered by her commitment to inclusion and experimentation. I would particularly like to try Lions in the Library, as it sounds particularly unique. I’m in NY, USA.

  • Ooh this was incredible!! I loved her thinking and view, both grounded and inspired. And I mean “We sing the body electric” ….who could resist WW?? The notes in Lions in the Library sound amazing also. Warm, a little funky, familiar, yet intriguing. Sign me up!!
    I am in California.

  • I loved Jessica’s path on perfumery. She seems so creative and someone who loves exploring new things and that surely relies on her creations. I also love that she chose Walt Withman as her favorite artist, I love his poems aswell.
    I would love to win Lions in the Library, I am so curious about the note of oldbooks.
    USA here.

  • I think what fascinated me about Jessica’s into perfume was the background and experiences that they had prior to actually getting involved with getting into making perfume. The diversity really makes me curious of how each experience could play into the creative process of making a new scent and would love to try a sample set.
    From TX, USA

  • I always find it interesting to read up on how folks become perfumers. I found Jessica’s path to be eclectic!
    Lions in The Library sounds absolutely wonderful!
    Thanks, from Canada.

  • Jessica’s story was inspiring and I hope that if anyone reading this feels lost in life, they take note and see that life is all about finding and defining yourself. Take different paths, try new things, seek discomfort. As Jessica said – us humans are “complex, gorgeously flawed and perfect” in our own ways. Her aim to make fragrances that reflect that perspective is very interesting to me and its exciting that she shares the perspective that American fragrances tend to bend (if not break) the rules a bit. Lions in the Library sounds like a wonderful fragrance and I would love to get my nose on it. Reading from North Carolina, USA.

  • Jessica Mara seems like a perfectionist as well as a polymath. It is gratifying to have a vision and be able to tirelessly work on it until it turns into your dream. I admire her appreciation for old guard perfumes but a desire for improvement and modernity. Would love to have either the discovery set or perfume bottle, but would prefer the Lions in the Library bottle. Liked @CaFleureBon Profiles in American Perfumery. MD, USA.

  • Fascinating upbringing. I was raised the total opposite!! I don’t know anything about Walt Whitman, so am curious why his name is on schools, stamps, etc. I’ll have to look him up. This website always makes me think and I love that. I’d love to win Lions in the Library as I love libraries and thinking about it now I’ve missed going as often as I did pre covid. Happy my daughter was in high school by the time of covid as we spent HOURS in libraries every week (she even got asked to leave one for a temper tantrum at age 5). Thanks for the chance. USA.

  • I heard a visual artist discuss one’s path in any art is less like walking down a road and more like being a moth drawn to a lightbulb. There’s something that attracts you, that you know vaguely, and the path is a circling now closer, now farther, looking in at it from all sides.
    I see this idea playing out in Jessica’s path to perfumery. She carries within her many different ways of looking at art and perfume because she has had so many varied experiences in the past. I’d love to try her sample set to see how her background has influenced her art!
    Best wishes from the US.

  • Jessica sounds wise and avid and a perennial reinventor. If her perfumes reflect her philosophy, I’ll love them.

  • I love what Jessica said about forging new paths! I’ve samples all the L’Aventura fragrances and they all feel totally unique, which speaks to the diverse life experiences that inspire her. I would love to win a bottle of Lions in the Library! I’m in MN, USA

  • Jessica!! ❤️❤️❤️ I love Walt Whitman! You are exactly right: “we resonate. We relate, deeply.” As Whitman wrote, “I contain multitudes.” Here we are, stumbling about this wonderful mess of a life. ❤️ I love labdanum and libraries, so I’m Super intrigued by your fragrance, Lions in the Library (also very interested in your ideas! a sample set would be Amazing)! I hope I am a lucky winner!!! ❤️ USA

  • I appreciate Jessica’s multiple jobs – bartender, silversmith, bespoke shoemaker, etc before getting into perfumes. This diverse experience would bring something unique to her approach to perfumery. I would love to try Jessica’s creations based on the description that they are novel and yet familiar.
    Greetings from Maryland, US.

  • Love her description of “the excitement of creation and I love the tediousness of refinement.” Would be excited to try the sample set or Lions in the Library. In the US

  • Dave at American Perfumer recently added L’Aventura to the site’s stock list and a few different perfumes in the lineup jumped out. I particularly want to try Sanctuary and The Faraway. I enjoyed learning more about the perfumer; Mara’s upbringing sounds dynamic, vibrant, and full of interesing people “doing unconventional things and living unconventional lifestyles.” She mentioned traveling a lot during those years and her perfume lineup seems to focus on a sense of place—both vast and intimate. Mara framed it as trying to create escape via scent, and scents that conjure spaces that are both rememembered and imagined in detail. I think that’s my favorite aspect of perfumes—a scent that takes you somewhere and renders the scened in detail—so I’m drawn to Mara’s approach. I also appreciated Mara’s thoughtful comments on Walt Whitman. Thank you for the profile!

    I’m in the midwest, USA. I like CaFleureBon Profiles in American Perfumery on Facebook. Thanks!

  • This American Perfumer has a fascinating profile, with such a profound variety of life experiences. I also love that her favourite artist is Walt Whitman.

    I would love to try a full sample set of this perfumer.

    Cheers from WI, USA

  • Michael Prince says:

    What I found fascinating about Jessica’s Path to Perfumery is her upbringing and being raised by two creative and artistic parents and constantly moving made her a better person by facing adversity and experiencing people from all walks of life, and has worked so many different jobs. Her perspective on American Perfumery is that she likes how it can be creative and isn’t set rules such as in traditional European Perfumery. I am from the USA.

  • sephrenia300 says:

    Wonderful article! What I found fascinating about Jessica’s path to perfumery was how her upbringing moved around a lot and constantly having to adjust to new places as well as her varied professional experiences led to her wanting to create scents that surprise and are unconventional and intriguing. I particularly love unconventional perfumes so that really appeals to me. I live in the US.

  • I enjoyed reading about Jessica Mara’s upbringing and her sense of adventure, free spirit, free thinking, and desire to fearlessly explore novelty, as needed. Very American, and this is reflected in her views on American Perfumery. I like the yin and yang balance in L’Aventura Perfumes Lions in the Library, and love the smell of old books and a library. So I am very curious to smell L’Aventura Perfumes Lions in the Library. Thanks for the interview and draw. I am from the United States.