A subjective assessment

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A subjective assessment - Reviewing the SIHH
7 minutes read
A few remarks and findings in the aftermath of the first big watchmaking summit of 2014: the main trends, the star timepieces and some food for thought.

The dust has definitely settled down after a frenetic 24th installment of the Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie, in Geneva. Looking back, what were the main trends and which conclusions should be drawn? Several colleagues from the press share the idea that it was indeed a great show, but I’m sticking with those who claim this year’s edition didn’t exactly provide the best crop destined to horological superstardom compared to previous ones.

What I can say is that I’m struggling to come up with a top ten of watchmaking masterpieces with timeless mindblowing potential,  while I’m still recovering from an overdose of artistic crafts and ultra-slim watches seen at the Palexpo exhibition centre. Anyway, in the aftermath of the year’s first horological Grand Slam, here are a few very personal thoughts and preferences I’d like to share.

A subjective assessment

Paving the Milky Way

How appropriate was the exhibition of the Federation de la Haute Horlogerie baptized ‘Horology, a Child of Astronomy‘ held simultaneously, exploring the close relationship between watchmaking and the heavens? Because the Earth’s satellite and the celestial dome proved to be quite popular yet again, with the launch of interesting perpetual calendars and exquisite timepieces highlighting the Moon and the skies – such as the Lange & Söhne Richard Lange Perpetual Calendar Terraluna with more than 2000 micro-stars, the Van Cleef & Arpels Midnight Planetarium featuring a three-dimensional cosmic dance, the sidereal Cartier Rotonde Earth & Moon, and Greubel Forsey’s QP à Equation with solstices and equinoxes.

A subjective assessment

Decorative Avalanche

Don’t get me wrong, I even graduated in History of Arts and am quite sensitive to any kind of artistic display or arcane craftsmanship; plus, I truly admire how the so-called Métiers d’Art have been adding an old-school dimension to contemporary high watchmaking. Nonetheless, by the end of the Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie, I felt like I had an overdose of rare artistic crafts after being swamped by a plethora of models featuring dials decorated with all sorts of enamelling, guillochage, engraving, embroidery, marquetry, granulation, mosaic, invisible setting, skeletonizing, miniature painting and so on. From timepieces to plain art pieces: how much is too much? Or is it due to the excessive influence of Asian and Middle-Eastern demand?

 

Patented Nomenclature

Van Cleef & Arpels once again excelled in the name game, trademarking the expression Poetic Astronomy (after having done so with Poetic Complications and Extraordinary Dials) and forcing us writers to look for semantic alternatives in order to describe comparable romantic functions from other brands. Van Cleef & Arpels also had the best-named timepiece: Pierre Arpels Heure d’Ici, Heure d’Ailleurs (Time Here, Time Elsewhere). And Montblanc, after having Nicolas Rieussec dethroned by Louis Moinet as the inventor of the chronograph last year, corrected their own narrative to ‘the inventor of the first *patented* chronograph’. And since we mentioned the word narrative: founder Carlos Dias has been deleted from Roger Dubuis’ history.

A subjective assessment

Slim Shady Utopia

Another powerful trend was the uber-thin quest, with Vacheron Constantin boasting the slimmest minute-repeater ever with the Patrimony Contemporaine’s 8.09mm until Jaeger-LeCoultre disclosed the Master Ultra Thin Minute Repeater Flying Tourbillon (aka Hybris Mechanica 11) with a tourbillon/minute repeater combination at just 7.9mm. And Piaget, the self-styled Master of Ultra-Thin, introduced the slimmest mechanical watch ever with the 3.6mm Altiplano 900P! Again, even though it’s quite an admirable feat and a proof of technical excellence to reduce a calibre to the thinnest possible dimensions, most people looking for a mechanical timepiece and who are not slim fetishists actually appreciate a bit of volume and weight – I, for one, don’t like to feel as if I’m wearing a coin on the wrist. 

A subjective assessment

The Troublemaker

Montblanc definitely cranked up the heat and took the SIHH by storm, showing not only a technical breakthrough but also a price-positioning policy that had many a rival brand concerned. With the restless new CEO Jérôme Lambert at the helm and a new strategy for the Villeret manufacture movement, the company showed strong on all fronts aimed at every kind of horophile – starting with a complete overhaul of its 2,000 to 5,000 Euro offerings and including the launch of the appealing Meisterstuck Heritage line. The Meisterstuck Heritage Perpetual Calendar (at a mere 10,000 Euro!), the Homage to Nicolas Rieussec (featuring a hybrid ceramic hour ring with integrated luminous numerals), the TimeWalker Chronograph 100 and the Villeret 1859 ExoTourbillon Rattrapante were among the show’s most talked about timepieces.

 

Apparent Incongruence

A diver’s watch featuring a perpetual calendar function? A few good-humoured journalists wondered how long IWC kept their master watchmaker Kurt Klaus (the inventor of the innovative in-house perpetual calendar system in the 1980s) on the bottom of the sea in order to come up with the idea of the huge 49mm Chronograph Perpetual Calendar – one of eight new references in its new Aquatimer collection that also includes a chronograph, an automatic, three special editions dedicated to the Galapagos and two technical diver’s watches.

A subjective assessment

Best Stand

It was called both the most artistic and the most futile stand at the Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie: the one unveiled by Roger Dubuis. The creativity was outstanding, with all those imposing monocled statues and an actual clock specifically brought in to tower over the entrance. Nonetheless, many reporters coming over from other essential booths such as A. Lange & Söhne’s for instance, couldn’t help thinking:“Is this theme park really necessary to present a collection or to sell high-end watches?”. Honourable booth mentions are also due to the discreet charm of Baume & Mercier, the voluptuous luxury of Ralph Lauren, the dangerousness of IWC with all those sharks flying above the visitors, and the teaching/learning area devoted to the “Naissance d’une Montre” initiative at Greubel Forsey.

A subjective assessment

Best Presentation

Among the various presentations, the best accolade should go to Vacheron Constantin’s: no marketing hype whatsoever, elegantly sober and straight to the point with the help of rotating panels featuring high relief watches upon which different images were projected. Oh, and many missed the beautiful models that Piaget usually brought along in previous years to showcase the new timepieces on their wrists. And it felt odd listening to a professional presenter with a heavy American accent talking about Baume & Mercier’s ancient watchmaking legacy. By the way, how’s this for a lack of communication: three brands chose the same type of press gift – portable autonomous smartphone battery chargers…

 

Hidden Treasures

There were the Talking Pieces. And then there were the timepieces that deserved to be talked about a lot more than they actually were – and some of them didn’t even get a line in most wrap-ups of the event. One of those hidden treasures of the SIHH that, in my opinion, deserved a lot more attention certainly was the rose gold La Monegasque Club chronograph with fossilized wood dial and DLC treated bezel on an original alligator strap. Audemars Piguet’s Millenary Minute Repeater was another interesting piece that was overshadowed by an avalanche of new Royal Oak references. And let’s not forget Greubel Forsey’s €1 million Art Piece 1 with an optical device to enlarge by 23 a less than 1mm micro-sculpture by Willard Wigan!

A subjective assessment

A Bunch of Men’s Watches

In no specific order and without repeating brands, a list of the men’s watches I considered to be the best and/or most relevant at the SIHH 2014: 1 – A. Lange & Söhne Richard Lange Perpetual Calendar Terraluna; 2 – Van Cleef & Arpels Midnight Planetarium for its celestial dance; 3 – Piaget Altiplano 900P for its ultra-slim architecture, 4 – the updated Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Offshore 42 mm series (rather than the Royal Oak Concept GMT Tourbillon) for its popular appeal; 5 – Cartier Rotonde Astroregulator as a symbol of the exceptional job being done by Caroline Forestier-Kasapi’s team; 6 – Montblanc Meisterstuck Heritage Perpetual Calendar as a symbol of the brand’s new era; 7 – Jaeger-LeCoultre Master Ultra Thin Minute Repeater Flying Tourbillon because of its construction; 7 – Panerai Radiomir 1940 Chronograph for its retro charm; 8 – Baume & Mercier Clifton 1892 Flying Tourbillon; 9 – Vacheron Constantin Malte Tourbillon Openworked; 10 – Richard Mille RM 36-01 Sébastien Loeb; 11 – Greubel Forsey’s QP à Equation.

 

A bouquet of women’s timepieces

Again, in random order, a list of the women’s watches I considered to be the best and/or most relevant at the SIHH 2014: 1 – Van Cleef & Arpels Pierre Arpels Heure d’Ici, Heure d’Ailleurs because of the original retrograde and double jumping hour complication (plus, with its delicate lug system, it’s a man’s watch that looks like a great oversized women’s timepiece); 2 – Richard Mille RM 10-01 Natalie Portman; 3 – Ralph Lauren Stirrup Petite Link; 4 – Cartier Ballon Blanc; 5 – Piaget Altiplano in Miniature Enamel.

A subjective assessment

Weirdest image

I took a picture of a watch I saw on display at a window – then realized afterwards I had caught Ralph Lauren wearing a RL67 Tourbillon in a strange place alongside a dog driving his vintage car. Now that had to be the strangest sight at this year’s Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie, don’t you think?

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