These Crazy Watches Cost Up to $1.2 Million

 

Is there anything more inscrutable than the inner workings of a mechanical watch? I only have to wonder how the fathomless ratchets and springs and calibres and pinions all dance in perfect synchrony with each tick, before my eyes glaze over and my brain starts leaking out of my ears. Being as much a precise science as a mystic art, I think it’s safe to say that horology might naturally favour those with a more eccentric, or even insular, bent. 

Enter Vianney Halter.

Half master engineer, half kinetic artist, ALL certified space cadet, Halter has earned his place in the wonderful world of watches as a highly respected independent maker, who’s mystifying and inspired creations have turned heads in the industry for decades. Come with us now on a journey through time and space while we have a look at some of Halter’s career highlights.

Antiqua

Halter’s illustrious career began by some accounts in 1998 with his first independent release, the Antiqua, although in truth his horological pursuits began much earlier. Having graduated from the renowned Paris Watchmaking School in 1980, Halter made somewhat of a name for himself repairing antique timepieces and other horological relics from the past.

Upon its release, the Antiqua was dubbed a “relic from the future”, albeit a future imagined perhaps by a Victorian mind rather than a modern one. The Antiqua was deeply inspired by Halter’s experience with such mechanical wonders and the piece embodies the tradition of the sturdy and reliable marine chronometer—precisely measuring minute, hour, day, date, month and year (including leap-year cycle) across its four porthole-framed faces.

Despite its rather rustic, steam-punk appearance, the Antiqua (approximately $84,000) is truly an avant-garde creation, featuring a mass rotor and in-house calibre invented by Halter himself. This timepiece spares no expense, either, and each Antiqua sporting a casing made entirely from gold alloy or platinum, forty-three gleaming rubies and a total of 104 rivets that adorn the casing alone. Truly an awe-inspiring and career-defining masterpiece.

The Classic Janvier N°1

Ten years on from the Antiqua, Halter reached for the stars and released the Janvier N°1. At $894,575 AUD, the price also goes above and beyond.

This spectacular piece was a celebration of Halter’s independent career as much as it was an homage to the astronomical obsessions of Halter’s long-dead idol, Antide Janvier. Nicknamed the “clockmaker from the stars”, Janvier’s horological creations described the celestial dance of the heavenly bodies. 

The watch's 2008 release seamlessly integrates these primordial precessions into its single face with a total of five hands: Hour and minute hands made from blue steel, engraved gold hand to represent the sun, and a pair of hands with a black and platinum disc to depict the lunar cycle.

Why so many hands though? The reasons are manifold.

Firstly, the sun hand displays the true-time according to the sun, which varies from the blue-handed civil average time by up to fifteen minutes throughout the year. The paired moon-hands simultaneously display the phases of the moon as they appear on earth, with the upper black disc passing over the bright, cratered platinum disc just as the moon wanes and waxes over its cycle.

This elegant and functional piece is similarly endowed with precious riches. The casing, hands and face crafted from a host of noble metals as well as a total of 35 rubies supporting the mechanism.


Deep Space Resonance

Vianney Halter didn’t merely reach the stars with his forthcoming creation, the Deep Space Resonance. Costing $1,266,150 AUD, this watch is more of an artwork than accessory. The watch — wacky in the right ways— is the result of a fathomless sojourn into space, beyond the reaches of human perception. 

In method acting style that would impress even Day-Lewis, Halter’s website and most press material surrounding the impending release of the Resonance tells a story inspired by the noble mission of Star Trek’s Enterprise: to commune with outer-space beings and spread the knowledge of our four dimensions of existence.

And all four dimensions are indeed displayed by this mesmerising piece of kinetic art. 

The marvellous mechanism and acting face of the watch rotates within a space-age sapphire crystal dome that rises 10mm from the watch. The concentric cages house delicately oscillating gears that rotate in three dimensions, freely within the watch structure, as if it were a planetary body rotating in space. Simultaneously, the internal mechanism spins within the outer traverse over 60 seconds, measuring minutes and hours to represent the fourth dimension of time.

The esoteric system at the heart of this incredible piece is Halter’s mechanical exploration of the concept of resonance coupling, which allows the entire system to precisely keep time and function in perfect synchronicity. 

Halter’s most noteworthy creations have focussed far more on the artistic limitations of watchmaking, rather than its functional applications. Needless to say, his latest project is certainly no exception to the rule. While his pieces are financially beyond the reach of all but the wealthiest purveyors of the horological arts, their exclusivity - only 500 pieces produced thus far—ensures that each will undoubtedly endure as a living marvel to mystify generations to come.


Love watches? You need to see the Zenith Chronomaster.


 

Author Bio:

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Jacob Hall

Jacob is a writer who loves travel, beach days, and speaking foreign languages. Jacob has his own blog, Democratista, where he talks about society, history, and political economy.


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