Watches and Politics

Sevan Bıçakçı — The Timekeeper

9 min · 29. Apr. 2026
Episode Sevan Bıçakçı — The Timekeeper Cover

Beschreibung

Not all watch books are about movements, calibers, or complications. Some are about time as culture. In this episode of Watches and Politics — Series 3: WatchBooks, I explore Sevan Bıçakçı: The Timekeeper — a book that sits at the crossroads of jewelry, craftsmanship, symbolism, and storytelling. Sevan Bıçakçı is not a traditional watchmaker.And this is not a traditional watch book. This episode looks at:• why Sevan Bıçakçı approaches time through symbolism, not mechanics• how history, mythology, and geography shape his work• the relationship between jewelry, watches, and narrative meaning• what The Timekeeper reveals about time as a cultural artifact• how this book challenges Swiss-centric ideas of horology• who should read this book — and who might find it unfamiliar This episode connects directly to:Series 1 — time as culture, identity, and powerSeries 2 — collectors and creators outside institutional systems Series 3 is the library of Watches and Politics — where watches are read as cultural expressions, not just machines. 📌 Subscribe for weekly watch book episodes📌 Comment with the Sevan piece that left the strongest impression on you📌 Share with the friend who says “this isn’t really watchmaking” — and see what happens #watches #politics #history #horology #collecting #art #sevanbicakci #timekeeper #watches #jewellery #jewelry

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Alle Folgen

49 Folgen

Episode Vacheron Constantin — Time Is Art Cover

Vacheron Constantin — Time Is Art

What happens when watchmaking stops chasing precision… and starts pursuing beauty? In this episode of Watches and Politics — Series 3: Watch Books, I explore Time Is Art, a book published by Vacheron Constantin that examines the relationship between watchmaking, artistic craftsmanship, and cultural expression. Rather than focusing only on complications or engineering, this book highlights the artistic disciplines that transform watches into miniature works of art — from engraving and enameling to gem-setting and decorative finishing. This episode looks at: • why Vacheron Constantin positions watchmaking within the world of art• how métiers d’art elevate watches beyond instruments• the relationship between creativity, heritage, and technical mastery• how decoration itself becomes a form of storytelling• why this book reflects a broader philosophy inside the Maison• who should read this book — and who might expect something different This episode connects directly to: ▶ Series 1 — watches as symbols of culture and power▶ Series 2 — institutions and the people shaping horology▶ Series 3 — the books that form the intellectual library of watchmaking Series 3 is the library of Watches and Politics — where watches are explored as cultural and artistic artifacts. 📌 Subscribe for weekly watch book episodes📌 Comment with the métier d’art technique that fascinates you most📌 Share with the friend who believes watches are only about engineering #WatchesAndPolitics #WatchBooks #VacheronConstantin #TimeIsArt #Horology

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Episode The Collectibles — Jaeger-LeCoultre Cover

The Collectibles — Jaeger-LeCoultre

What makes a watch collectible? Age alone is not enough. Rarity alone is not enough. In this episode of Watches and Politics — Series 3: WatchBooks, I explore The Collectibles, Jaeger-LeCoultre’s remarkable book dedicated to the vintage watches that helped define the identity of the Grande Maison. But this is not simply a catalog of old watches. It’s a book about heritage as strategy. Through carefully documented historical pieces — from early Reversos to rare mid-century creations — Jaeger-LeCoultre tells the story of how a manufacture’s past becomes part of its present authority. In this episode, we discuss: • why certain vintage watches become “collectibles” while others fade away• how Jaeger-LeCoultre curates and authenticates its own historical legacy• the role of archival research in modern collecting • what this book reveals about the evolution of design and complications at JLC • how institutional storytelling shapes the vintage market • who should read this book — and who may prefer a purely historical reference This episode connects directly to: ▶ Series 1 — watches as cultural symbols▶ Series 2 — collectors and market influence▶ Series 3 — the books that define horological knowledge Series 3 is the library of Watches and Politics — where watches are read as historical narratives, not just objects. 📌 Subscribe for weekly watch book episodes📌 Comment with your favorite vintage Jaeger-LeCoultre reference📌 Share with the friend who believes vintage collecting is about more than rarity #WatchesAndPolitics #WatchBooks #JaegerLeCoultre #TheCollectibles #Horology

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Episode Watchmakers: The Masters of Art Horology Cover

Watchmakers: The Masters of Art Horology

Behind every extraordinary watch is not just a brand — but a person. In this episode of Watches and Politics — Series 3: Watch Books, I explore Watchmakers: The Masters of Art Horology, a book that shifts the focus of watch history away from companies and toward the individual craftsmen whose ideas shaped modern horology. This is a book about people who refused to follow the rules. The watchmakers featured here represent a remarkable generation of independent thinkers who transformed mechanical watchmaking from a declining craft into one of the most creative fields in modern design and engineering. In this episode, we discuss: • how independent watchmakers reshaped the modern horological landscape• the philosophy behind contemporary haute horlogerie• why small ateliers can sometimes innovate faster than large manufactures • the personalities and ideas behind some of the most influential watches of the last decades• how this book captures a moment when creativity returned to watchmaking• who should read this book — and who might want a more technical reference This episode connects directly to: ▶ Series 1 — watches as cultural and symbolic objects ▶ Series 2 — voices from inside the watch industry▶ Series 3 — the written canon of watch culture Series 3 is the library of Watches and Politics — where watches are understood through the people who imagined them. 📌 Subscribe for weekly watch book episodes📌 Comment with the independent watchmaker you admire most📌 Share with the friend who believes the future of horology belongs to individuals #WatchesAndPolitics #WatchBooks #IndependentWatchmakers #Horology #WatchCollectors

10. Juni 20269 min
Episode The Cartier Tank Watch Cover

The Cartier Tank Watch

Some watches follow fashion.Some follow engineering. The Cartier Tank followed history. In this episode of Watches and Politics — Series 3: WatchBooks, I explore The Cartier Tank Watch — a book dedicated to one of the most recognizable and culturally influential watchdesigns ever created. Introduced by Louis Cartier in 1917, the Tank did something almost unprecedented: it translated the geometry of modern warfare into an object of elegance and restraint. This is not simply a watch story.It is a story about design, symbolism, and cultural longevity. In this episode, we discuss: • how the Tank’s design was inspired by the aerial view of World War I tanks• why Cartier approached watchmaking through architecture and proportion• how the Tank became a watch worn by artists, leaders, and cultural figures• the evolution of the Tank across generations — from Tank Normale to Tank Louis and beyond• what the book reveals about design as cultural power• who should read this book — and who might expect a different type of watch history This episode connects directly to: ▶ Series 1 — watches as symbols of power and identity▶ Series 2 — collectors and cultural authority▶ Series 3 — the written canon of watch culture Series 3 is the library of Watches and Politics — where watches are read not only as machines, but as cultural artifacts. 📌 Subscribe for weekly watch book episodes📌 Comment with your favorite Tank reference📌 Share with the friend who believes great design never ages #WatchesAndPolitics #WatchBooks #CartierTank #Cartier #Horology

3. Juni 20269 min
Episode The Beauty of Time Cover

The Beauty of Time

Before time was optimized, quantified, and monetized, it was contemplated. In this episode of Watches and Politics — Series 3: WatchBooks, I explore The Beauty of Time — a book that approaches horology not through brands or complications, but through art, culture, and the human relationship with time itself. This is not a technical reference.It’s a cultural meditation. In this episode, we discuss:• how timekeeping has been shaped by art, philosophy, and society• why clocks and watches were once expressions of worldview, not efficiency• the relationship between beauty and precision• how objects that measure time also shape our experience of it• what this book does exceptionally well — and where it resists simplification• who should read this book — and who might find it slow, in the best way This episode connects directly to:Series 1 — time as a political and culturalconstructSeries 2 — institutions and long-term thinkingSeries 3 — the written canon of watch culture Series 3 is the library of Watches and Politics — where watches are read as cultural ideas, not just instruments. 📌 Subscribe for weekly watch book episodes📌 Comment with the timepiece you find most beautiful — and why📌 Share with the friend who believes beauty has no place in engineering #watches #politics #history #horology #collecting #art #books #thebeautyoftime

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