Watches and Politics
Some watchmakers build machines.Others build culture. In this episode of Watches and Politics — Series 3: Watch Books, I explore Vacheron Constantin: Artists of Time — a book that frames watchmaking not as industrial production, but as artistic authorship practiced over centuries. This is not a technical manual.It’s a meditation on craft, continuity, and creative identity. In this episode, we discuss:• why Vacheron Constantin describes its watchmakers as “artists”• how métiers d’art sit at the center of the Maison’s identity• the relationship between tradition, creativity, and restraint• how handcraft becomes institutional memory• what the book reveals about time as an artistic medium• who should read this book — and who might expect something different This episode connects directly to:Series 1 — time, culture, and powerSeries 2 — institutions and long-term identitySeries 3 — the written canon of watchmaking Series 3 is the library of Watches and Politics — where watches are read as cultural works, not just mechanical ones. 📌 Subscribe for weekly watch book episodes📌 Comment with the Vacheron métier d’art that resonates most with you📌 Share with the friend who says “art and watchmaking are different things” #watches #politics #history #horology #collecting #art #books #vacheronconstantin
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