:host { --enviso-primary-color: #FF8A21; --enviso-secondary-color: #FF8A21; font-family: 'boijmans-font', Arial, Helvetica,sans-serif; } .enviso-basket-button-wrapper { position: relative; top: 5px; } .enviso-btn { font-size: 22px; } .enviso-basket-button-items-amount { font-size: 12px; line-height: 1; background: #F18700; color: white; border-radius: 50%; width: 24px; height: 24px; min-width: 0; display: flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; text-align: center; font-weight: bold; padding: 0; top: -13px; right: -12px; } .enviso-dialog-content { overflow: auto; } Previous Next Facebook Instagram Twitter Pinterest Tiktok Linkedin Back to top
Snuff

Ask anything

Loading...

Thank you. Your question has been submitted.

Unfortunately something has gone wrong while sending your question. Please try again.

Request high-res image

More information

Specifications

Title Snuff
Material and technique Wood, cardboard, lithograph on paper, gilding, cellophane, glass, metal, plastic and liquid
Object type
Perfume bottle > Bottle > Holder > Kitchen and household > Utensil
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 4,6 cm
Length 17,8 cm
Depth 9,8 cm
Artists Executor: Elsa Schiaparelli
Accession number V 2228 a-c (KN&V)
Credits Purchased with the support of Mondriaan Fund, 2003
Department Applied Arts & Design
Acquisition date 2003
Creation date in 1939
Provenance Galerie de Stefano, Brussels; Galerie L.B. Defeo, Dordrecht
Exhibitions Rotterdam/Wolfsburg 2009-11
Internal exhibitions The Art of Fashion: Installing Allusions (2009)
External exhibitions Dal nulla al sogno (2018)
A Surreal Shock – Masterpieces from Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (2021)
Only the Marvelous is Beautiful (2022)
Surrealist Art - Masterpieces from Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (2021)
Dalí, Magritte, Man Ray and Surrealism. Highlights from Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (2023)
A Surreal Shock. Masterpieces from Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (2023)
Research Show research A dream collection - Surrealism in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Literature Rotterdam 2007, pp. 132-33; London/Rotterdam/Bilbao 2007-08, pp. 338-39; Rotterdam 2009, p. 93
Material
Object
Technique
Lithograph > Manual > Planographic printing > Printing technique > Technique > Material and technique
Gilding > Gilding > Gilded > Plate > Metallized > Covering surfaces > General technique > Technique > Material and technique

Do you have corrections or additional information about this work? Please, send us a message

Entry catalogue A dream collection - Surrealism in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen

Author: Marijke Peyser

In the early 1930s, following the success of her knitted pullovers and sportswear, the Italian fashion designer Elsa Schiaparelli started to make haute couture. She was overrun with clients. Evening gowns and costumes for masked balls were produced and both her shop and workshops soon ran out of space. In early 1935 she moved to an elegant mansion with nigh on a hundred rooms at 21 Place Vendôme in Paris. The conversion of the rooms in which the clients were received was entrusted to the interior designer Jean-Michel Frank.[1]

The first three perfumes Schiaparelli launched in 1934, Soucis, Salut and Schiap, were popular and sold so well that she created a separate perfume department in her company. A perfume boutique, designed by Frank as a gigantic birdcage made from black-painted bamboo, in which there were birds, was the reception room for clients who wanted to buy perfume.[2] Shocking, Schiaparelli’s most successful perfume, was launched in this room in 1937. The artist Leonor Fini designed the bottle, shaped like a mannequin with the curves of the American actress Mae West.[3] The fragrance Sleeping came on to the market in 1940. The bottle was the shape of a barley twist candle with a burning flame inspired by a design by the costume designer Marcel Vertès and possibly designed by Alberto Giacometti.[4] The conical packaging resembled a candle snuffer.[5] The advertising campaign for Sleeping used Surrealist techniques such as the photomontage with a column of the Place Vendôme replaced by a proud perfume bottle. The idea was that people would put on the perfume before going to sleep, so that the fragrance would stimulate the subconscious to produce ecstatic dreams.[6]

The perfume Snuff, an innovative creation for men, was also launched in 1940. The glass bottle, packed in a cigar box, is shaped like a pipe. Schiaparelli had been inspired by the work of the Surrealist artist René Magritte for this presentation. His painting La Trahison des Images (1929) with the inscription ‘Ceci n’est pas une pipe’ illustrated his statement ‘An object never performs the same function as its name or its image.’[7] This perfume was a success, largely thanks to the James Bond film Thunderball (1965). Bond’s main antagonist Emilio Largo, played by Adolfo Celi, continually sprinkled Snuff on his handkerchief.

Footnotes

[1] Martin-Vivier 2006, p. 375, note 372: Jean-Michel Frank, first cousin of Otto Frank, Anne’s father, probably began the conversion in the second half of 1934. The first fashion show was staged in these rooms in February 1935.

[2] Ibid., p. 174.

[3] Dalí was also inspired by the actress’s voluptuous figure: in 1938 he designed the Mae West Lips Sofa for his patron Edward James, see no. 24.

[4] Rotterdam 2007, p. 133.

[5] Ibid.

[6] See http://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/156098 (consulted 21 January 2017).

[7] Paris 2004, p. 147. This quote refers to Magritte’s article ‘Les mots et les images’ in the magazine La Révolution surréaliste, no. 12 (December 1929).

Show research A dream collection - Surrealism in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Show catalogue entry Hide catalogue entry

All about the artist

Elsa Schiaparelli

Rome 1890 - Parijs 1973

Bekijk het volledige profiel