Sexual Healing Art Meets Art
At a glance
Is Sexual Healing Art Meets Art worth trying?
Sexual Healing by Art Meets Art is a Oriental Vanilla fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Evening, Special Occasion wear in Fall, Winter
- Performance feel
- Very Good longevity with Strong sillage
- Signature profile
- honey, sweet, tobacco with Honey, Tobacco, Vanilla
The first impression
Sexual Healing by Art Meets Art is a Oriental Vanilla fragrance for women and men. Sexual Healing was launched in 2017. The nose behind this fragrance is Christophe Raynaud.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Christophe Raynaud
Christophe Raynaud is a perfumer who has created fragrances for Alexander McQueen, Annayake, and Antonio Banderas. His works include Dark Papyrus, L'eau Pour Homme Intense Vetiver, and The Golden Secret. He also contributed to Art Meets Art with Besame Mucho and Sexual Healing, demonstrating a range from woody to sensual scents.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Sexual Healing Art Meets Art
Essence
The Mystic seeks transcendence through the senses, blurring the line between earthly and divine. Sexual Healing embodies this with its hypnotic blend of honey, tobacco, and vanilla-a fragrance that feels like a ritual in liquid form. The warm spicy notes suggest someone who understands desire as a path to the sacred.
Style & Aesthetic
They wear flowing fabrics in midnight blues and blacks, their silhouette suggesting both priest and seducer. Their jewelry is talismanic: a serpent ring, a pendant of obscure symbolism. The scent clings to them like incense in a hidden temple.
Philosophy & Values
They believe ecstasy is a form of knowledge, the body a vessel for revelation. The vanilla base speaks to their belief in sweetness as birthright. For them, pleasure and piety are intertwined.
Relationships
They attract seekers and skeptics alike, their presence a riddle to be unraveled. Romantic partners are drawn into their orbit, the honey note promising both nourishment and stickiness. Friends come to them for truths wrapped in enigma.
Lifestyle
Their days are punctuated by small ceremonies: morning tea sipped in silence, evenings spent annotating ancient texts. The tobacco note lingers in their study, where candles burn low.
Shadow
Their allure can tip into manipulation; the spicy notes warn of a taste for power plays. They risk becoming lost in their own mythology, mistaking mystery for depth.
Conclusion
Sexual Healing is an incantation in a bottle, for those who worship at the altar of sensation. Like the Mystic, it’s primal, wise, and dangerously seductive.