OLFACTORY RESTORATION

Friend of the Night

Ceramic art by MARVA STUDIO

Regular price
Sold out $700.00
Sale price
$700.00
FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
Friend of the Night
FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
Load image into Gallery viewer, FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
Load image into Gallery viewer, FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
Load image into Gallery viewer, FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
Load image into Gallery viewer, FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
Load image into Gallery viewer, FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
Load image into Gallery viewer, FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE
Load image into Gallery viewer, Friend of the Night
Load image into Gallery viewer, FRIEND OF THE NIGHT by ARQUISTE

Friend of the Night

Ceramic art by MARVA STUDIO

Regular price
Sold out $700.00
Sale price
$700.00

A 36 oz / 1kg five-wick candle in a striking ceramic vase designed with top Mexico City studios MARVA and SURCO. Highlighting the best of Mexican artisanship, from the Michoacán enameled clay vase to the intoxicating tuberose scent created by master perfumer Rodrigo Flores-Roux.

Shipping calculated at checkout.

Payment Methods

Shipping

ARQUISTE ships exclusively within the continental United States.

East Coast customers: 3 business days after processing.
Central and West coast customers: 5-7 business days after order processing.


History

August, 1400, Tenochtitlan, Mexico.

Mexican tuberose, also known as Amiga de Noche, has a dark story. According to Aztec lore, a bat was sent from the underworld to the heavens to attack Xochiquetzal, the Aztec Venus. The bat bit into her arm and from her blood was born the most intoxicating and seductive of night blooms, the “Friend of the Night”- a bridge between the natural and supernatural worlds.

Developed with Rodrigo Flores-Roux.

Olfactive pyramid

Top Notes

Mexican tuberose

Sugar cane

Cognac essence 

Heart Notes

Ylang Ylang

Sampaguita flower from the Philippines

Orange blossom

Base Notes

Immortelle from Corsica

Castoreum

Oak barrel extract

Intro

History

Description

Description

Hand-made by artisans in Michoacán and hand-poured in CDMX, Mexico.
High-concentration luxury perfumed candle: 36 oz / 1kg
Estimated burning time:  Up to 175 hours. 
*Includes trim wicker and candle snuffer.
Hand poured in the Mexico
Premium soy-blend wax100% cotton wickVegan, sustainable & totally cruelty free
*Candles can ship internationally.

More

 

Image

More research

- In the Aztec language, a metaphor for poetry is “in Xochitl in Cuicatl”(Flor y Canto – Flower and Song), which exemplifies the importance of flora in Mexico.  Xochitl, or “flower”, was used to refer to eloquent, elegant and well-used words.


- Two Aztec deities were closely associated with flora: Xochipili, the ‘Prince of Flowers’ was the god of summer. The exquisite body of his wife Xochiquetzal, was believed to be the source of all floral scents.


- The Aztec Gods received their offerings through fragrant smoke: White Copal, an aromatic tree resin used by Mesoamerican cultures as burned incense, acts as a cool, menthol backdrop to the rich floral scents.

- The velvety scent of Omixochitl or Mexican Tuberose is spiked by a warm-but-cold sweetness that was thought to attract benevolent spirits.

- Flowers and vegetables for the Mexico City market are still cultivated in Xochimilco, an area composed of floating gardens, known as chinampas, which dates from Aztec times.

 

Bio

Bibliography

– Caso, Alfonso, The Aztecs: People of the Sun, translated by Lowell Dunham, illustrated by Miguel Covarrubias; Norman: Oklahoma University Press, 1958.

– Velasco Lozano, Ana María L. & Nagao, Debra, Mitologia y Simbolismo de las Flores, “Arqueologia Mexicana” Magazine, Las Flores en el Mexico Prehispanico, Numero 78, Mexico City, 2006.

– Cañizares-Esguerra, Jorge, Puritan conquistadors: Iberianizing the Atlantic, 1550-1700, Stanford University Press, Stanford, California, 2006.

FRIEND OF THE NIGHT