Quick answers
History
Viridarium was the name Romans gave to the enclosed gardens of patrician villas, those walled spaces where they cultivated the pleasure of experiment. Launched in 2023, Maria Candida Gentile’s eau de parfum draws on a precise source: the fresco in the villa of Livia, wife of Emperor Augustus, dated to the first century before our era. This “painted garden”, remarkably preserved in the National Roman Museum, unfolds a botanical catalog where species from distant worlds stand side by side.
The house, founded in 2009, practices a niche perfumery in which art and history feed the olfactory writing. Viridarium extends the work Maria Candida Gentile also pursues in contemporary art, from the Venice Biennale to the Fondazione Prada. Here the perfumer becomes in turn a daring gardener: she draws together materials that everything separates, a silver fir and a date palm, a citrus and a wax, to recompose the abundance and strangeness of an imperial garden.
The thread of the fragrance is this unexpected juxtaposition. The citrus top of mandarin and bergamot opens onto clary sage; the heart blends chamomile, wild herbs and poppy leaves with date and beeswax, warm and faintly sweet notes; the base of exotic woods, incense, cypress, elm and white fir raises the canopy of the garden. Grasse-trained and faithful to naturalness, the perfumer works materials drawn from flowers, plants and roots, in a vegan formula free of phthalates, parabens and synthetic colorants.
The house presents Viridarium as a divergent and highly original fragrance that abolishes time and draws opposites together. Enthusiast databases such as Fragrantica place it among green aromatics and record the 2023 date; the house itself pairs the aromatic with the woody. Of medium intensity and unisex, it illustrates the manner of a perfumer who draws from the history of art the material of her olfactory gardens.
Olfactory pyramid
Viridarium reads in three movements, from a top of citrus and herbs to a base of wood and incense, by way of a warm heart of date and wax.
The through-line is the meeting of opposites: a green citrus and wild herbs held by a base of wood, incense and conifers.
Olfactory profile
Viridarium is a green aromatic rather than a dark woody. The citrus top, soft mandarin and bright bergamot, opens onto clary sage, herbal and faintly amber. You enter the garden by a cool, luminous path before the vegetation thickens.
The heart makes the whole originality of the fragrance. Chamomile and wild herbs lay a green carpet that date and beeswax warm with an unexpected honeyed sweetness. Carnation adds a spicy touch. It is this contrast, between the green freshness and the sweet warmth, that gives Viridarium its strangeness and its charm.
The base raises the canopy of the garden. Exotic woods, incense, cypress, elm and white fir compose a floor at once woody, resinous and green, where the conifer answers the citrus of the top. That structure explains the fragrance’s measured hold and medium intensity: a garden that lingers without ever weighing, coherent from end to end.
Key characteristics
When and where to wear
Viridarium is a daytime, shoulder-season fragrance. Its top of citrus and herbs suits spring and autumn, while the base of wood and incense lets it hold in cooler weather. The trail stays measured, in line with its medium intensity.
Usage markers
Seasonal fit
| Season | Fit | Critical notes |
|---|---|---|
| Spring | ★★★★ | Its prime season. |
| Summer | ★★★☆ | Fresh, but the woody base shows. |
| Autumn | ★★★★ | Herbs and woods open up. |
| Winter | ★★★☆ | The wood and incense base holds. |
Context fit
| Setting | Fit | Usage recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Everyday | ★★★★ | Its reference use. |
| Office | ★★★★ | Green and discreet. |
| Vacations | ★★★★ | Outdoors, in the garden. |
| Evening | ★★★☆ | In mild weather. |
| Culture | ★★★★ | A fragrance of art history. |
Similar perfumes
The aromatic, woody garden has its neighbors; a few share its green vegetation and warm materials.
| Perfume | House · year | Why it is close |
|---|---|---|
| Eau des Merveilles | Hermès · 2004 | A saline, green woody, amber in the base; a kinship of a luminous aromatic held by warm woods. |
| Premier Figuier | L’Artisan Parfumeur · 1994 | A milky green of fig tree and herbs; the neighborhood of a fresh, vegetal Mediterranean garden, simpler than Viridarium. |
| Philosykos | Diptyque · 1996 | Olivia Giacobetti’s benchmark fig, leaf and wood; a shared taste for green, plant-driven materials. |
Common questions
See also
Sources
- Official Maria Candida Gentile site, Viridarium page (Italian and English editions)
- Official Maria Candida Gentile presentation, master perfumer
- Maria Candida Gentile, official Viridarium page
- Fragrantica, Viridarium entry (2023)
- Parfumo, Viridarium entry
