zenith reveals hidden creative history behind its watchmaking icons

zenith reveals hidden creative history behind its watchmaking icons

Famed for its emblematic models – whether rare vintages or contemporary collaborative editions – as much as for its key movements, Zenith’s timepieces are icons that transcend the industry. The brand acts at the forefront of Swiss watchmaking, as it shapes the future by daring to challenge new heights in technical performance as well as aesthetics.

 

Laurence Bodenmann, Head of Heritage, and Sebastien Gobert, Head of Design, explore the hidden ingredients behind Zenith’s creativity with designboom.

Zenith enameled ad from the beginning of the 20th century

Image © Zenith Heritage

 

 

innovation since 1865

 

Zenith’s story begins in 1865 by Swiss visionary Georges FavreJacot who strove for the creation of the most perfect watch ever. This mission still motivates the brand to this day, as the ‘label’ master of chronographs aspires them to push possibilities further and further.

 

Georges Favre-Jacot’s vision was to achieve perfection by implementing new means of production (verticalization) at the heart of the Swiss traditional watchmaking industry. Such perfection was meant from the start both on a technical level – in terms of performance and precision, and on an aesthetical level – rethinking what would make such watches desirable in the eyes of the modern customer. Georges Favre-Jacot Zenith’s design has always been operating on both levels,’ begins Laurence Bodenmann, Head of Heritage, at Zenith’s home in Le Locle.

zenith reveals hidden creative history behind its watchmaking icons
Georges Favre-Jacot, founder of Zenith

Image © Zenith Heritage

 

 

el primero: an everlasting icon

 

Zenith’s El Primero encapsulates both aspects of this research of perfection. The 1969 world’s first automatic, integrated high-frequency chronograph calibre, whose history remains uninterrupted thanks to the saving gesture of Zenith’s watchmaker Charles Vermot, combines from the start a performing movement – which led to its resurgence, despite the quartz crisis – and original case and dial designs which turned them into icons in the history of watchmaking.

zenith reveals hidden creative history behind its watchmaking icons
The El Primero ‘TV-Screen’ from 1973, ‘mak[ing] accurate time a thing of beauty’

Image © Zenith Heritage

 

 

As a new millennium approached, new applications and possibilities for El Primero arose. An open heart watch revealed the beating heart of the calibre to the wearers for the first time. Zenith then defied gravity with the patented Zero G mechanism that suspended the regulating organ in a gyroscopic cage in the timepiece. The next big milestone debuted DEFY El Primero 21, which amazed with a beat rate of 50Hz for an accurate 1/100th of a second chronograph function. The timeless innovation continues to challenge the designs of Zenith to this day.

 

At Zenith, we believe it is important that the heritage and design teams are in the same department,’ clarifies Bodenmann.Heritage is part of the product. We work together to ensure our new products are recognizable as Zenith, while being innovative. Heritage brings the logic behind certain past design choices, why decisions were taken then, to help today’s designers in opening new realms of possibilities as they create the future.

zenith reveals hidden creative history behind its watchmaking icons
Zenith DEFY El Primero 21 launched in 2018

Image © Zenith

 

 

paving the way for aesthetic innovation

 

With a history of industry-defining innovations, it would be easy for Zenith to let its performance lead its future – but being innovative in terms of aesthetics has always been equally as important. The turn of 20th century was marked by the brand’s series of creative partnerships to establish new aesthetics into the watchmaking world, enhancing the introduction of the new means of production Zenith had paved the way for within the heart of Switzerland’s otherwise traditional watchmaking industry. Zenith’s founder Georges Favre-Jacot this went looking for unique collaborations with some of the most prominent Art Nouveau masters, like Alphons Mucha and René Lalique, which had found new ways of shaping industrial materials and objects, to call for a new era. The results made Zenith’s already reputable precision watches the choice for global institutes as well as influencers, like socialites, politicians and more. One such collaboration saw a young promising and adventurous architect design Jacot’s home in Le Locle. He went on to be internationally known as Le Corbusier.

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