ARMOR & SANCTUARY SAMPLE DUO

ARMOR & SANCTUARY SAMPLE DUO
EXTRAIT DE PARFUM
Recently, perfumer Diane St. Clair re-discovered Barbara Kruger’s “Untitled (Your Body is a Battleground)” created for the 1989 March for Women’s Lives in Washington D.C. For St. Clair, this iconic protest art is as relevant today as it was then.
Diane has created two perfumes, Armor and Sanctuary, to use the art of scent — and its power to provoke our deepest emotions — to speak out against a culture that allows men to control women’s bodies without their consent. She hopes that wearing these perfumes can provide a sense of both empowerment and security.
Armor captures the sentiment of Barbara Kruger’s “Battleground” piece with its gathering dark and foreboding aromas which represent the forces of misogyny. Over time, the axis shifts from aromas of threat to a bucolic garden of citrus, fruits, and blooms that offer strength, protection, and liberating power.
Perfume writer Alex Musgrave says of this perfume:
“Women are not vessels to be hurled to a masculine floor and shattered. Fragrance can be a beautiful armor.”
Alex Musgrave notes that the power and disturbed beauty of Sanctuary lies in its “smells and dreams of longing, an odd bitterness of feeling trapped in a life that has slowly, corrosively taken you captive.”
Slowly being taken captive is how it can feel to lose gender equality, reproductive rights, and body autonomy. For many, pregnancy has become dangerous, as doctors fear treating emergency miscarriages in states where abortion is illegal. Likewise, Gisele Pelicot awoke from years of being abused by her husband to see the horrors that had occurred while she was unwittingly held captive.
This fragrance is intimate and spectral. It speaks of pollen and flowers, rich fruits, and moist greenery. Streaked like a watercolor painting, its beauty is akin to opening a window in spring. It offers calm and quiet, creating a protective sanctuary to heal and survive.
Armor and Sanctuary are conceptual fragrances designed to evoke a feeling without a disclosed list of notes or materials used to create them.
Perfumer: Diane St. Clair, 2025