Shawn Maher Benton Park for American Perfumer Review (Shawn Maher) 2021 + Limited Edition Draw

Shawn Maher Benton Park for American Perfumer

Shawn Maher of Maher Olfactive collaboration Shawn Maher Benton Park for American Perfumer

Fragrance curator and entrepreneur Dave Kern of American Perfumer and artisanal perfumer Shawn Maher (of Chatillon Lux and Maher Olfactive) have been collaborating on their latest endeavor for nigh a year. On May 29th, 2021 a lottery will be held for 25 bottles of their brilliant new perfume Shawn Maher Benton Park for American Perfumer Benton Park (as is frequently the case, occasionally there may be a few more bottles released in the future – but when they are sold out, that’s that). It’s very different from anything else Shawn has previously created, an entity of its own. I’m honored to have been sent a sample – from which I may share my perceptions with you.

Thomas Hart Benton

 Thomas Hart Benton, self-portrait 1970 via kchistory.org

Oftentimes Shawn’s backstories are easy to follow: they concern a particular area of his native St. Louis or Missouri (Orris ForestWeinstrasse, Admiral, Confluence, La Petite Prairie, Sunrise on La Salle, Gratiot League Square); a concept which revolves around music (Tempo Rubato, Nefertiti) or a specific aromatic material (Crystal Moon, Santal Auster), or an influential personage (Madame Chouteau, Unconditional Surrender). Benton Park is in another category entirely when it comes to conceptual perfumery. Its name derives from a neighboring park in an historic area close to the perfumer’s home – one which was named after another iconoclastic native son, painter Thomas Hart Benton. Benton depicted America’s working-class with a keen eye towards social criticism and rejected European modern art (although he studied abroad). This particular style of portrayal became known as Regionalism; some of its better-known advocates were Grant Wood (American Gothic) and John Steuart Curry (a painter of the Wild West, he was commissioned during FDR’s New Deal to ennoble everyday life), although some include earlier Andrew Wyeth works as well. There were many critics who decried Benton’s homey, folk art-infused style – or criticized it for its very content.

Shawn Maher Benton Park inspired by painter

Thomas Hart Benton’s mural via artnet

Where is the thread of connectivity here, you well may ask? Shawn wanted to compose a scent which was bold, something which would honor the conventional and wed it to a more modern conceptualization. The physical locus of Benton Park is filled with contrasts; beautiful old buildings (including the Anheuser Busch Brewery) consort harmoniously with urban renewal and contemporary architecture in an organic fashion. In such a spirit, Dave and Shawn discussed their mutual fondness for vetiver in all its varied colorations dependent upon terroir. When the subject of tuberose arose shortly thereafter, more spirited conversation ensued: how to capture the uplifting nuances of tuberose via headspace, rather than resorting to a more opaque, weighty absolute?

 Tuberose and Vetiver

 tuberoses via Unsplash and Vetiver Haiti from wikipedia

Shawn relishes a challenge. How does the atmosphere which surrounds a tuberose smell, exactly? What will it take to represent its freshness, the mentholated aspect, the waxy butteriness? Fruity ripeness? Spicy notes which are separate from its green facets? Then you need to consider Vetiver With a V: grassy, smoky, round, how it will entwine itself with the elaborate tuberose accord – and eventually, the musk triad which will anchor the fragrance and enhance its components while adding a slight edge to keep one on their toes?

Shawn Maher was inspired by Thomas Hart Benton painttings for Benton Park for American Perfumer

Thomas Hart Benton June Morning 1940 via artnet.com

Benton Park’s tuberose accord is constructed around a myriad of materials both of botanical origin and synthesized – some which will be familiar. Shawn goes into great detail describing them and the roles they play; it’s complex. You can explore this in his current blog post. In this particular instance, I’d prefer to tell you what I smell – because, exclusivity aside – hopefully you will be compelled to try it because of the way it makes you feel. My initial impression is intensely minty and fresh in a medicinal blast: ever so spicy due to a hefty dose of eugenol and Methyl Diantilis®. They impart the clovey, cinnamonlike aspects of carnation (and tuberose!) and wintergreen/ bitter cherry pit/nutty methyl benzoate.  Blue gum eucalyptus contributes additional camphorous qualities, but it also has a good deal of sweetness. Brightness arises from limonene, a terpenic citrusy note. Methyl tuberate, intensely floral and fatty – smells like tuberose and gardenia, and it’s crucial. Fruitiness is accentuated by peach lactone, raspberry ketone and other aromachemicals. To round out verdancy, some limpid materials create a watery greenness with a crisp edge (violet leaf, Irival); another contributes an herbal/fruit/floral tone redolent of chamomile. The three vetivers chosen are each unique, but they don’t truly shine until the drydown, when the tuberose accord’s showy grandstanding abates somewhat. Then you can really enjoy the lovely balsamic tone Benton Park has taken. You also will appreciate how the tuberose has been designed as it has quietened, softened its voice; at this juncture, more than its commencement –  it is apparent that anyone at all may wear  Shawn Maher Benton Park  for American Perfumer with confidence. The musks are just enough for ballast that won’t bowl you over.

All in all, Shawn Maher Benton Hall for American Perfumer is a powerhouse: statuesque, magnificent and audacious. It’s certainly an admirable illustration of American Ingenuity.

Notes: tuberose accord (methyl benzoate, limonene, methyl salicylate, blue gum eucalyptus oil, methyl tuberate, gamma decalactone, dimethyl benzyl carbinyl butyrate, raspberry ketone, benzyl alcohol), double-distilled vetiver, Indian vetiver, Haitian vetiver, green accord (cis-3-hexenyl tiglate, violet leaf absolute, Irival), spicy accord (eugenol, Methyl Diantilis®, vanillin), musk accord (ambrettolide, Muscenone®, ethylene brassylate)

Sample provided by Dave Kern of American Perfumer – many thanks!  My nose is my own…

~ Ida Meister, Deputy Editor and Natural Perfumery Editor

Thanks to the generosity of David Kern of American Perfumer, we are able to offer a 2 ml. sample o Shawn Maher Benton Park for American Perfumer which launches May 29th, 2021) for one registered reader  In THE USA ONLY. To be eligible, please leave a comment explaining what appeals to you about Ida’s review of Shawn Maher Benton Park for American Perfumer. Draw closes May 31, 2021

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13 comments

  • Gabriel Garcia says:

    The art of hart benton at best is the compressed view of americana, beautiful and raw, I would like to sample the heady florals, statuesque sounds good to me.

  • Being a Missouri girl, all of your details about my state reel me right in to your review.

  • Belladonna says:

    Wow, I was really wondering what Benton Park smells like & now I know. Very much enjoy the Maher point of view, and did not know this is a collaboration with Dave Kern, whom I admire. Ida’s description of the layers of scent sound intoxicating. Thanks for the opportunity, in the US

  • I love almost all of Shawn Maher’s creations, at least the ones I have tried. And reading Ida’s review, I am sure Benton Park is no exception. His perfumes are complex and not what they seem to be at first (Treachery comes to mind), and change over time (Tempo Rubato comes to mind). Connecting perfumes to places, people, histories from a regional area, Midwest for him, is his forte, though his creations, as in true artwork, are universal. Enjoyed Ida’s description in detail of Benton Park, especially the different notes and chemicals utilized, and how the overall effect is truly original, individual, and regional, just as the historical figure Benton was. Thanks for the review and draw. Writing from the USA.

  • This scent sounds absolutely heavenly! I’m such a fan of green, vetiver scents. Can’t wait to smell this!

  • As an artist myself, I love reading about art inspiring art. I am also fascinated with accords, the creation of one thing from smaller, unrelated components. Very interesting. In maryland

  • patrick_348 says:

    I loved Ida’s lengthy description of the various notes that went into the creation of Benton Park’s tuberose accord. It gave me an appreciation of just why she is in awe of Maher’s skills. Although I have never tried any of Maher’s creations (and how I want to!), Ida’s description makes him sound like an American Regionalist perfumer, in the very best and most positive sense of the term. I am in the US, in NC.

  • What an interesting idea for a fragrance. It sounds like Shawn Maher Benton Park really does encapsulate American ingenuity. I would love to try this. I am in the US.

  • wallygator88 says:

    Dang Ida, this is such a great review. I had a chance to pick up a sample of Benton Park from Maher Olfactive and it is such a joy to smell. Your review is an ode to whatever my nose picked up from that sample bottle.

    The waxiness of the tuberose combined with the nuanced airiness of the mint and the beautiful vetiver make me think of lying down in a dew kissed garden of tuberose, with the sun coming up and warming the chill away, perfuming the air with the smells of the waking world.

    Cheers from WI, USA

  • Courtenay Courier says:

    The notes in this scent are remarkable. The different vetivers and the way the different notes marry into each other seem like an unreal experience. USA

  • Everything in this series sounds so beautiful. I’ve been liking tuberose recently so I’m interested to see how it is interpreted here with this fragrance. The interpretation sounds definitely unique and does evoke an American style to me. I live in the USA. Thanks for the giveaway!

  • doveskylark says:

    I enjoy Shawn Maher’s backstories very much, especially about music and his hometown of St. Louis. I am intrigued by the vetiver and tuberose notes in Benton Park. I love that there are medicinal and balsamic tones in this fragrance.
    I live in the USA.

  • Julesinrose says:

    As always, I enjoyed every word of Ida’s erudite writing. This is a doozy, as my grandmother would’ve said! I just mentioned Thomas Hart Benton this very morning! What’s the chance of that? NYC Art School trained me – I’ve always been unabashedly a fan of his work. Well, that aside, the conceptual nature of this perfume is particularly intriguing. It is not the anti-perfume conceptual work that frankly turns me off over and over again. It truly is an attempt to create olfactory art. Outside of vetiver, these are not notes that generally call to me, but I want to smell this! In the USA