V Private Collection

V Private Collection




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Enjoy complimentary shipping on UK orders over Β£100. Europe Delivery also available.
Enjoy complimentary shipping on UK orders over Β£100. Europe Delivery also available.
The V Private Collection Fruity Floral Perfume is a fresh, clean Jasmine note at its heart, boasting 20% Perfume Concentration. This fragrance quickens it pace with top notes of Cassis and Palmarosa. Subtle nuances of Daphne and Muguet keep the fragrance light before deeper scents of dark and fruity Plum, Labdanum and Ylang-Ylang spiral in to the woody base, rich with resinous tones of Cedarwood, Patchouli, Amber, smoky Styrax and smooth suede.
Enjoy complimentary shipping on UK orders over Β£100. Europe Delivery also available.
The V Private Collection Fruity Floral Perfume is a fresh, clean Jasmine note at its heart, boasting 20% Perfume Concentration. This fragrance quickens it pace with top notes of Cassis and Palmarosa. Subtle nuances of Daphne and Muguet keep the fragrance light before deeper scents of dark and fruity Plum, Labdanum and Ylang-Ylang spiral in to the woody base, rich with resinous tones of Cedarwood, Patchouli, Amber, smoky Styrax and smooth suede.
A love of perfume is the inspiration behind V Fruity Floral. A fruity floral perfume that is an olfactory dance for the senses. Tantalizing with bergamot, black pepper and frankincense and brimming with aromatic allure. It is a perfume that cavorts on the skin and reveals itself to its wearer with the rhythm and lyricism of a beautifully choreographed ballet. This scent dances deftly from high, fresh notes of Palmarosa to the exotic allure of Jasmine, ending with rich Amber and Cedarwood for a theatrical finish.
Over time the fragrance evolves to reveal a trilogy of complementary notes
Grown in northern India and the foothills of Himalaya. Like lemongrass it has a vibrant citrus character infused with sweet rose
Jasmine - an ancient symbol of grace and elegance - is plucked before dawn to retain its scent.
Obtained from evergreen trees, Cedarwood oil is one of the oldest ingredients in perfumery. It has a distinctive woody, spicy scent that envelops the wearer
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The Private Collection is a striking suite of perfumes that celebrate the extraordinary moments of a life's work.
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Clive Christian Perfume is a leading independent British perfume house with a vision to create the world’s finest perfumes. The brand’s predecessor, the Crown Perfumery Company established in 1872, is the only house ever to have been granted permission to use Queen Victoria’s crown on its bottles. An image that defines every bottle of Clive Christian perfume to this day.
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"Art Collector" redirects here. For the magazine, see Art Collector (magazine).
A private collection is a privately owned collection of works (usually artworks) or valuable items. In a museum or art gallery context, the term signifies that a certain work is not owned by that institution, but is on loan from an individual or organization, either for temporary exhibition or for the long term. This source is usually an art collector, although it could also be a school, church, bank, or some other company or organization. By contrast, collectors of books, even if they collect for aesthetic reasons (fine bookbindings or illuminated manuscripts for example), are called bibliophiles, and their collections are typically referred to as libraries.
Art collecting was common among the wealthy in the Ancient World in both Europe and East Asia, and in the Middle Ages, but developed in its modern form during the Renaissance and continues to the present day.[1] The Royal collections of most countries were originally the grandest of private collections but are now mostly in public ownership. However the British Royal Collection remains under the care of the Crown, though distinguished from the private property of the British Royal Family. The cabinet of curiosities was an important mixed form of collection, including art and what we would now call natural history or scientific collections. These were formed by royalty but smaller ones also by merchants and scholars.
The tastes and habits of collectors have played a very important part in determining what art was produced, providing the demand that artists supply. Many types of objects, such as medals, engravings, small plaquettes, modern engraved gems and bronze statuettes were essentially made for the collector's market. By the 18th century all homes of the well-to-do were expected to contain a selection of objects, from paintings to porcelain, that could form part of an art collection, and the collections of those who would normally qualify for the term had to be considerably larger, and some were enormous. Increasingly collectors tended to specialize in one or two types of work, although some, like George Salting (1835-1909), still had a very wide scope for their collections. Apart from antiquities, which were regarded as perhaps the highest form of collecting from the Renaissance until relatively recently, and also books, paintings and prints from the late 15th century onwards, until the 18th century collectors tended to collect fairly new works from Europe. The extension of serious collecting to art from all periods and places was an essentially 19th-century development, or at least dating to the Age of Enlightenment. Trecento paintings were little appreciated until about the 1830s, and Chinese ritual bronzes and jades until perhaps the 1920s. Collecting of African art was rare until after World War II.
In recognition of its importance in influencing the production of new art and the preservation of old art, art collecting has been an area of considerable academic research in recent decades, having been somewhat neglected previously.
Very famous collections that are now dispersed include the Borghese Collection and Farnese collection in Rome, and the Orleans Collection in Paris, mostly sold in London. When this happens, it can be a large loss to those interested in art as the initial vision of the collector is lost.
The Princely Family of Liechtenstein have works by such artists as Hals, Raphael, Rembrandt and Van Dyck, a collection containing some 1,600 works of art, but were unable to show them since 1945 when they were smuggled out of Nazi Germany. The works were finally displayed in the Liechtenstein Museum after nearly 60 years with most in storage.[2] The important collection of the Thyssen family, mostly kept in the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, which settled in Madrid in 1992, was bought by the Spanish state. Only an exhibited part, the collection of Carmen Cervera, widow of the late Baron Thyssen, remains private but exhibited separately in the museum.
Many collections were left to the public in some form, and are now museums, or the nucleus of a museum's collection. Most museums are formed around one or more formerly private collection acquired as a whole. Major examples where few or no additions have been made include the Wallace Collection and Sir John Soane's Museum in London, the Frick Collection and Morgan Library in New York, The Phillips Collection in Washington DC, and the Museu Calouste Gulbenkian in Lisbon Portugal.
Other collections remain complete but are merged into larger collections in museums. Some important 19th/20th examples are:
^ Jim Lane (2005-10-25). "Private Art Collections". Retrieved 2006-10-03.
^ Martin Bailey. "The World's Second Greatest Private Art Collection". Forbes. Retrieved 2006-10-03.
^ "The Metropolitan Museum of Art - The Robert Lehman Collection". Metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2012-06-11.
^ Metropolitan Museum of Art press release, September 1999
^ Thomas Hoving. Making the Mummies Dance. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1993.
Β Media related to Private collections at Wikimedia Commons
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