Star Wars Watches
Transcription
Star Wars Watches
P16 Star Wars Watches A new Swiss firm is designing collectible, futuristic timepie URWERK, AN UPSTART SWISS WATCHMAKER, COULD NOT BE found in a booth at the Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie in January, but instead, true to fonn, it had staked out an iconoclastic position on the periphery of the Geneva watch fair. In the presidential suite of the Four Seasons Hotel des Bergues, a rotating shift of journalists and collectors came to hear Urwerk's co-founder wax poetic about how the flnn makes only 150 futuristic-looking watches a year "in the spirit of an art project." Over at the dining-room table, an earnest engineer demonstrated the latest ''flyback hand," a mechanism that counts down minutes before snapping back, on the hour, to its zero position, a gadget in the company's just-released model. Urwerk, as this scene suggests, is rattling Switzerland's traditional watch industry with its brand of hardedged modernism. It should be on the radar of U.S. collectors. The fIrm was founded in 1997 by a third-generation Swiss watchmaker, Felix Baumgartner, and a hard-driving Swiss artist, Martin Frei, who had partly earned his international artist cred while living in Brooklyn, N.Y. (Baumgartner's brother, Thomas, helped found Urwerk but left the firm.) As Frei tells it, both he and the Baumgartner brothers were tired of the tradition-bound watches that the Swiss watch industry was producing, and they spent a couple of years discussing how they might create timepieces with a genuine 21st century aesthetic and technology at their core. Their fIrst effort, the DR-WI, had no traditional watch dial but a deceptively simple portal that allowed the time of day to migrate like a rising and setting sun across the gold watch face, the correct hour visible on a rotating disc seen through the portal. The 101 did not sell well. The watch was inspired by the 17th-century Campanus Night Clock and looked more retro than futuristic; it was also hard to read if you wanted to know the exact time. Urwerk's fortunes changed considerably in 2005, when Harry Winston had the offbeat partners design the jeweler's innovative Opus V watch, the same year that Urwerk released its Maxwell Smart-looking UR-103.03. This fIrmly futuristic watch -with no traditional dial, hands, or wheels-sported a crystal in the shape of a horseshoe that revealed A prototype ~a carousel with rotating discs of numdrawing of the bers, like satellites. UR-210 by ~ As the day proceeded, the carousel co-founder .,slowly rotated the correct satellite and Martin Frei o hour digit to the window's edge, which simultaneously indicated the minutes via a 60-minute gauge just below the highlighted hour's digit. The watch originally sold for 55,000 Swiss francs ($60,000),and quickly became a collectors' favorite. Felix Baumgartner's father had urged his son to create a watch that indicated the time at just a glance, while you were driving a car. The UR-103.03 model did just that. While Baumgartner creates watches fraught with technical innovations, it is the artist Frei who streamlines the unusual technology into clean, 21st-century lines. He usually does so through comic-book-likeillustrations created during rigorous back-and-forth discussions leading up to production. Hang out with Frei and it's clear he is a magpie, grabbing inspiration from everywhere he can find it; but he partly attributes his futuristic designs to a childhood event. In 1977, Frei's engineer father was wor.king on spaceexploration research while at Princeton University, and regularly sent audiotapes back to his children in Switzerland about his life in the U.S. and what he was up to. In one tape he raved about this new film he had just seen: Star Wars. When the family was finally reunited back home, Frei senior took his sons, as promised, to see the George Lucas blockbuster. Martin was 11 at the time. "Such things stay with you," he says. "My generation connected to the story. It was an old story, but also a world we hadn't seen before." It's not hard to imagine, 35 years later, Han Solo wearing an Urwerk watch. In 2011, Urwerk's UR-110 picked up the award for "best concept and design" at the Grand Prix d'Hologerie de GenEwe,and in January the firm released an updated version called UR-110 PT. The original titanium has been shed for a platinum bezel, and it includes many of Urwerk's witty innovations on its "control board" seen through the panoramic sapphire crystal. An "oil change" gauge tells the owner when the watch is due for a full servicing; a "day/ night" indicator informs him whether it is a.m. or p.m.; and a 60minute gauge on the right edge has a hand that ticks off the minutes and promptly flies back to the original zero position on the hour. Only 20 UR-110PT watches will be made, and they are priced at CHF110,000 each. The other January release was the UR-21O AlTiN, an acronym that stands for a group of hard coatings made of aluminum, titanium, Cost of and nitride that make underlying UR-210: metals fiercely resistant to CHF145,OOO. scratches, shocks, and oxidation. This watch is loaded with new doodads, including, at 11o'clock,what the firm is claiming to be "a world-first complication"that tells the owner the watch's ''winding efficiencyover the past two hours." While your average time-seeker won't feel compelledto have this information, it is precisely the kind of technical innovation that Urwerk is becoming famous for and that gets collectors' hearts ticking faster and louder. Only 35 of these watches will be made, and they are priced at CHF145,000 each. What's next? Urwerk has so far studiously ignored digital technology, which is very much at the heart of 21st-century aesthetics and technical innovations. Penta pressed Frei on why Urwerk hadn't made this logical leap, since his own fine art relied heavily on the use of video. Frei responded carefully that digital technology remains a taboo with Swiss watchmakers because the first digital watches decimated the industry back in the 1970s;any foray by Urwerk into this space has to been done very carefully, he says. But that doesn't mean it can't be done. From what Penta could gather through cryptic remarks by Frei and his engineer, Urwerk's never-before-seen EMCwhich will make its debut this fall with 50 pieces priced around CHF80,OOO-couldvery well take some baby steps into this entirely new galaxy.•