Andy Warhol Pour Homme Andy Warhol

For Men
Eau de Toilette
Year: 1999

At a glance

Is Andy Warhol Pour Homme Andy Warhol worth trying?

Andy Warhol pour Homme by Andy Warhol is a Aromatic Fougere fragrance for men.

Best match
Casual, Office wear in Spring, Summer
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
aromatic, woody, fresh spicy with Basil, Tarragon, Jasmine

The first impression

Andy Warhol pour Homme by Andy Warhol is a Aromatic Fougere fragrance for men. Andy Warhol pour Homme was launched in 1999. The nose behind this fragrance is Dorothée Piot. Top notes are Basil and Tarragon; middle notes are Jasmine and Cardamom; base notes are Cedar, Oakmoss, Sandalwood and Musk.

What shapes the scent

aromatic 100%
woody 85%
fresh spicy 70%
white floral 60%
mossy 50%
herbal 40%
warm spicy 35%
green 30%
powdery 25%
earthy 20%

The perfumer behind it

Dorothée Piot

Dorothée Piot

Dorothée Piot is a French perfumer who has worked with prestigious houses such as Amouage, By Kilian, and Azzaro. She created fragrances like Amouage's Bracken Woman and Fate Woman, as well as By Kilian's Criminal of Love. Her portfolio also includes scents for Andy Warhol and Bentley, showcasing a range from avant-garde to classic elegance.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Basil Basil
Tarragon Tarragon

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Jasmine Jasmine
Cardamom Cardamom

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Cedar Cedar
Oakmoss Oakmoss
Sandalwood Sandalwood
Musk Musk

The mood it creates

The Creator Archetype: Portrait of Andy Warhol Pour Homme Andy Warhol

Essence

Andy Warhol Pour Homme embodies the Creator archetype, a scent for those who blur boundaries between art and life. Its aromatic fougère structure-basil and tarragon lifting into jasmine and cardamom, then grounding in cedar and musk-mirrors the creative process: fresh inspiration, bold experimentation, and enduring polish. Like Warhol himself, this fragrance thrives in the tension between the avant-garde and the accessible.

Style & Aesthetic

They favor crisp white shirts with unexpected details-a pop-art tie, a vintage leather jacket. Their spaces are minimalist yet curated, where a single Warhol print hangs beside industrial shelving. The green-herbal opening and woody-moss drydown reflect their love of contrasts: structured chaos, high-low aesthetics.

Philosophy & Values

They believe art is in the everyday, elevating the mundane into something iconic. The cardamom’s warmth and jasmine’s luminosity suggest a reverence for sensory pleasure as a form of self-expression. Their mantra: "Don’t think about making art, just get it done."

Relationships

They attract collaborators, not followers. Romantic partners are drawn to their kinetic energy, though some find their emotional depth obscured like the musk in the base-present but subtle. Friendships thrive on shared projects, not small talk.

Lifestyle

Mornings start with black coffee and a sketchbook. They work in bursts, fueled by the fragrance’s basil-crisp clarity, then unwind with gallery openings where the sandalwood’s creaminess feels at home. Weekends are for flea markets and Polaroid experiments.

Shadow

Their relentless reinvention can tip into detachment, like the oakmoss that anchors yet distances. They risk becoming observers of their own lives, mistaking curation for connection.

Conclusion

This scent is for those who see the world as raw material. Like the fragrance’s evolution from herbal to woody, they transform the ordinary into art-one spray at a time.