TAG-Heuer
Museum Opening -- January 30,
2008
TAG-Heuer
will be opening its new Museum, located in
La Chaux de-Fonds, Switzerland, on
Wednesday, January 30th. I have been
invited to attend the Opening, and will
use this page as a journal for my trip --
describing the sights and sounds of the
days in Switzerland, the actual Opening
event, and the Museum
itself.
It
is only fitting that I begin this
Journal with "Thanks" to my friends
at TAG-Heuer, who have invited me to come
to Switzerland for the opening. Won't it
be great to actually meet all these folks,
after the hundreds of e-mail messages and
dozens of phone calls over the past five
years!
I
will plan to update this Journal from time
to time, even after the first full version
is published. I hope that readers
will contact me with any comments or
questions by writing to
onthedash@bellsouth.net.
Jeff
Stein, January 22, 2008
|
|
|
Some
Questions, before the
Trip
(January
23, 2008)
I have
been collecting the vintage Heuer
timepieces for nine years, and have
participated in the online community of
collectors for five years, primarily
through my website dedicated to the
vintage Heuers (www.OnTheDash.com). In
advance of the trip to Switzerland,
I am thinking about several aspects
of the new Museum, and specifically how it
will relate to our little world of
collectors. Here are some of my questions,
in advance of the trip:
- How
will the items shown in the Museum
"correlate" to the timepieces that
our community of vintage collectors
cherish? We have our
"grail" watches -- for example,
earliest Autavias, the
"panda" Carreras, the AMI (Italian
Air Force) chronographs and anything
with the word "Chronomatic" on the
dial. Will those who assembled the
collection for the Museum share these
preferences? Will the "grails" be
properly represented, with propriety
being judged by the passions of the
vintage collectors?
- What
historical themes will the Museum
evoke? The vintage chronograph
collectors love the racers -- the big
names (McQueen and Siffert), as well as
some other champions who wore the
Heuers (Rindt and Andretti). How much
of this heritage of racers and racing
will we see in the Museum? What about
the sports timing? Will we see the
stopwatch that appeared at the
beginning of the "60 Minutes"
television show every week or the model
that John Glenn wore on his ride into
space?
- What
new resources will the Museum provide
for the community of collectors? Will
the Museum be loaded with informational
resources (catalogs and databases) or
will the Museum be limited to displays
of the watches? Will we see blueprints
and patent applications for the
Chronomatics? Drawings of the first
Carreras? Interesting prototypes and
studies? How will I capture any
meaningful portion of this, in the
alloted time?
- Will
any "frankens" or
"fakes" have made their way into
the Museum? And if they have, shall
I just smile and say, "indeed,
that's a very rare
one".
- What
about my latest obsession, the unique
Robo-Chrono
(Ford Split Lap Unit 77)? Will he have
gotten his ugly face into the Museum?
Will we have any information as to who
designed this nasty looking thing that
I love so much?
- The
invitation to the opening uses the
phrase, "From Heritage to Innovation".
The vintage collectors love the
"Heritage". No doubt, the TAG-Heuer
marketing types must love the
"Innovation" (evidenced by new
models using new technologies). How
will these themes be balanced and
interwoven? Will the Museum effectively
draw on Heuer's unique Heritage, as it
supports TAG-Heuer's current commercial
endeavors?
- I have
assisted the Museum in purchasing
several timepieces (for example, an 18
karat gold triple calendar chronograph,
engraved with the name of a US soldier
and dated 1946). Friends have supplied
other special chronographs to the
Museum. In my mind's eye, I can
visualize the beautiful displays for
these special watches. Will these
timepieces be displayed as
I imagine, or will they be stuck
in a closet, in some storage
room?
- Is
it ill-advised to be framing these
questions, to be posted in public
forums, facing the possibility that --
in the end -- I may not like the
answers?
|
|
The
BIG Question -- Which
Watches?
(January
26, 2008)
As
I get ready for the trip, there is
one question that family and friends keep
asking. It's not about where I will
be going, or what I will be doing, or
who I will be seeing, but rather the
question is, "Which watches will you be
taking to Switzerland?" Indeed, this is a
question that I have also spent a
fair amount of time considering, so let's
see whether we can develop an answer.
We'll go though the decision-making,
step-by-step.
The
most obvious thing is that I will
only take Heuer chronographs. None of my
"secondary" or "under-brand"s. On
this particular trip, it will be Heuers
and nothing else but Heuers.
The
next decision is "How many to take?" This
is not a swap-meet or a watch show, and
I don't see any activity on the
program called "Show and Tell", but
I know that I will wear one when
I travel, and I know that
I will want to wear something special
to the Museum Opening and party . . . so
that's at least two for the trip.
I must imagine that there will also
be some opportunities to show off one or
two of my "special" Heuers during the
visit.
In
a perfect world, I might want to take
eight or ten of my most prized Heuers. As
I think about (a) the limited
space that I will have in my
briefcase, (b) the fact that these
prized watches will be in a hotel room,
with the risk of theft, (c) the fact that
there can be hassles with customs,
bringing loads of watches back into the
United States after the trip, and (d) that
I will only be in Switzerland for two
full days, I decide that it will make
sense to bring a total of five watches --
one that I will wear while
I travel and four that I will
pack.
I am
thinking that this pack, which holds four
watches, will be perfect for the
trip:
Having
now determined that I will pack four
watches, the question becomes "which four
to pack and which one to wear while
travelling?". Let's work our way through
the decision-making
process:
- Let's
start with the big event -- the Museum
Opening and related party (or parties).
The attire for this event is stated to
be "trendy chic", and as I think
about what I will be wearing, the
obvious choice will be a Monaco. The
Monacos were "trendy chic" in
1969, and I have no doubt that
they will continue to be "trendy
chic" on the night of the Museum
Opening, January 30, 2008.
- Of
course, the next question is "Which
Monaco?". My dark gray, three register
one would probably be best for the
event -- somewhere between gray and
black, depending on the light, it is a
great party watch. But in the end
I decide that I will bring my
most unique Monaco -- the Chronomatic,
Reference 1133B, also known in our
little community as the
"Paintless
Wonder".
So that's the first watch, and we have
four slots remaining.
- The
next choice is also not so difficult.
I own one other "Chronomatic", a
black
Autavia, Reference
1163MH.
We have tracked several white Autavia
Chronomatics, but this is the only
black one that I have ever seen.
So if is one that "belongs" in the
Museum, then it may be fun to have,
during the events in Switzerland. So
that's two in the pack, with three
slots remaining.
- The
next one to make the list will, no
doubt, be the most controversial. But
it's rare, and it's "cool" (at least in
a 1970's sort of way), and it is
definitely trendy and it is definitely
chic, and -- perhaps in something of an
omen -- it has just arrived this past
week, after being lost in the mail for
almost two months. So the
Ford Split Lap Unit
77
makes the cut. If nothing else,
I think that it's a safe bet that
I won't be seeing too many of
these during the days in Switzerland.
So that's three in the pack, with two
slots remaining -- one in the pack and
one on my wrist.
|
|
Three
packed, one spot
remaining.
|
Two
slots remain, but it's late Saturday
night, so I'll make these last two
selections, during the day on
Sunday.
|
|
|
Sunday,
January 27, 2008
Two
news items today:
- Jack
Heuer, Honorary Chairman of TAG-Heuer,
and Jean-Christophe Babin, President
& CEO of TAG-Heuer, have issued
their "Foreward" to the Museum;
and
- I have
finally decided which five of my Heuers
will be making the trip to
Switzerland
+++++++++++++++++++++
CEOs
FOREWORD
TAG
Heuer introduces the first avant-garde 360
degree watchmaking museum, embodying 150
years of unique heritage displayed to
catch the imagination, and envision and
build the next 150 years. It reflects the
innovation, precision, performance and
prestigious sports embedded in our
DNA.
What
differentiates one brand from another? Why
does the TAG Heuer range currently
encompass lines such as the TAG Heuer
Formula 1, Monaco, Carrera, the SLR
Chronograph or the Grand Carrera? Why is
TAG Heuer the only watch brand to offer
instruments that are accurate to 1/10th,
1/100th and 1/1000th of a second for
wristwatches, and to 1/10,000th of a
second for timekeeping? The answer is
simple: it is all a matter of DNA, just
like human beings. The unique combination
that makes each person different from
another and implies that right from birth
we are endowed with certain
characteristics inherited from our parents
and from their combined
DNA.
The
same is true of brands. TAG Heuer carries
within it the visionary genes of its
founders Edouard Heuer and his sons
Jules-Edouard and Charles-Auguste:
entrepreneurship, innovation, an obsession
with ultimate precision, and a deep love
of prestigious sports. From the
oscillating pinion to the Mikrograph, the
worlds first mechanical stopwatch
accurate to 1/100th of a second, the
foundations on which TAG Heuer has built
its strength today were in place very
early on. Ever since then - and without a
doubt this is one of the brands
great assets - men such as
Charles-Edouard, Hubert and Jack Heuer,
and more recently the contemporary
management teams, have had the wisdom to
build the brands strength around
these central characteristics, to keep the
focus of their efforts, on both product
development and communication, within the
framework established by our founding
fathers. Our DNA is unique; it was created
in the late 19th century and continues to
drive a substantial proportion of our
development in the early 21st century: The
Calibre 360 launched in 2006 perpetuates
the obsession with precision that resulted
in the Mikrograph in 1916; while the TAG
Heuer Formula 1 embodies the ultimate
blend of prestige and performance, sport
and glamour as the Olympic Games and
greyhound races did in the
1920s.
I
am very proud and honored to welcome you
today to our new TAG Heuer 360 museum,
which celebrates the exceptional TAG Heuer
DNA, the unique sports heritage and
constant daring quest for technical
innovation and precision. Like our
timepieces it seeks to be innovative and
this museum has been designed to house the
first ever 360 degree conic movie screen
in the world. Managed by a battery of 12
computers processing over 1 million images
an hour, it creates a dynamic presentation
of the unique TAG Heuer watchmaking saga
that has lasted almost a century and a
half. Last but not least, this museum is
located in the TAG Heuer avant-garde
eco-headquarters, with its energy-saving
architecture that allows external and
natural light to flow seamlessly
throughout the building from the entrance
to the roof via the elevator tubes and the
office windows.
Let
me invite you to join me on a journey that
will take you from an unrivalled heritage
into an exciting future where everything
is possible.
Jack
Heuer, Honorary Chairman
Jean-Christophe
Babin, President & CEO
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
After
considerable deliberation, and with
valuable input from family members and
readers from near and far, 12 hours before
my departure for Switzerland,
I believe that I have completed
the line-up of watches that will be making
the trip to Switzerland, as
follows:
Let's
walk through these five watches, moving
from left to right.
- First
up is a Chronomatic Autavia, Reference
1163 MH, in black. Over the years,
I have seen approximately six
Chronomatic Autvias, all of them with
white dials. This is the only
black-dialed Autavia that I have
seen. It came to me from a collector in
Brazil, and should be good for "show
and
tell" sessions.
- Next
up is another Chronomatic, this one a
Monaco. This one has no serial number,
and no reference number, and is powered
by the very earliest version of the
Caliber 11 movement. The midnight blue
paint seems to have vanished, and thus
this one is known as the "Paintless
Wonder". This watch had been in a safe
deposit box, in rural Ohio, but was
abandoned and sold in a public auction.
It came to me through an ebay auction,
and has just been fully overhauled
(though all the original parts, except
for one wheel, were left in
place).
- So
after packing two Chronomatics, one an
Autavia and one a Monaco, it was clear
that I need to select (a) a
Carrera, (b) with a Valjoux 72
movement, (c) with a white dial. The
Reference 2447SN is one of the
"grails" for Heuer collectors, so
it makes the Travelling Squad. This one
came to me from a collector in
Germany.
- Next
up the one known to our group as
"Robo-Chrono", the Ford Split Lap Unit
77, the only electronic Heuer that
I own. If I find myself in a
room full of Monacos, Carreras and
Autavias, won't it feel good to know
that I have the only Ford Split
Lap Unit 77! This one came to me last
week, from a collector in Germany,
after spending eight weeks lost in
transit.
- Some
people refer to chronographs as "Tool
Watches", this Reference 510.502, has
been one of my old reliables. Powered
by the Lemania 5100 movement, this will
be the one to wear while travelling and
for the morning run. No points for
sleek design or scarcity, but a rugged
chronograph with excellent legibility.
Came to me from a collector in the
United States.
So
that's the line-up for the trip to
Switzerland -- four packed away and "Green
Guy" to wear while
travelling.
|
|
Tuesday,
January 29, 2008
Our
flight out of Newark was two hours late;
we land in Geneva at around 10:00 Tuesday
morning; and we drove directly to
Neuchatel. Before going any further, let
me give the line-up, of exactly who is in
this group we call "we".
The
trip is sponsored by TAG-Heuer for
journalists to attend the opening of the
new TAG-Heuer 360 Museum, in La
Chaux-De-Fonds, and to see the
introduction of some new TAG-Heuer watches
prior to the annual Basel Watch Show.
There will be approximately 200 members of
the media at the opening of the Museum,
and I am included in the delegation from
North America. The North American
delegation is led by Rachel Branch,
Director of Public Relations and Events,
TAG-Heuer, North America, with the other
participants being Norma Buchanan, Senior
Editor of WatchTime magazine, Gary
Girdvainis, Editor-in-Chief of
International Watch magazine, and Leslie
Wu, Editor-in-Chief of Canadian Jeweler
magazine. I will admit that I have asked
myself, at least once or twice during the
trip, what in the world I am doing in this
group, and whether I should declare myself
to be the Editor-in-Chief of
OnTheDash.com, as a matter of "equal
dignity". In any case, it's great to be
representing the vintage Heuer collectors
and the electronic media / bloggers on
this junket.
|
The
North American delegation (left
to right): Jeff Stein, Rachel
Branch, Leslie Wu, Gary
Girdvainis and Norma
Buchanan
|
During
the afternoon, the other members of our
group went snow-shoeing, but I had a
"conflict" (about which more below), so
instead I went on a self-guided walking
tour of Neuchatel (French for "New
Castle"). My first proiroty when visiting
any new town is to look for the vintage
watches. Having only around one hour to
kill, and being unable to find any decent
looking pawn shops or antique dealers, I
walked along the lakeshore, explored the
streets and city center, and made my way
up the hill to the local cathedral /
castle (which are usually on the high
ground and offer decent photo
opportunities). Here are some of the views
of Neuchatel.
Our
North American delegation is one of the
five groups of journalists staying at the
Palafitte Hotel, a five-star hotel a
couple miles away from the town center.
The Palafitte was built only five years
ago and is situated in the most amazing
spot . . . out on Lake Neuchatel. There
are three pavillions, of around five rooms
each, that are built out over the water.
These pavillions are built on pillars in
the lake, and each of the rooms has a
private deck, with a ladder going down to
the Lake. The furnishing of the rooms are
amazing -- plasma screen with home theatre
sound, a louvered wall between the bedroom
and bathroom (that swivels so that you can
see the Lake from the jacuzzi), every
electronic convenience, and even a glass
case with archeological artifacts (oddly
situated adjacent to the glass-walled
shower). I am lucky to have one on
the room built out onto the Lake, though
I didn't venture down the ladder.
Check here for a Virtual
Tour
of the Palafitte Hotel.
Interview
with Jack Heuer, Honorary President of
TAG-Heuer. My friends at TAG-Heuer
arranged for me to have a fantastic
opportunity on Tuesday afternoon: an
interview with Jack Heuer. Mr. Heuer
joined the company in 1958, as the fourth
generation of family leadership.
I have exchanged e-mail messages with
Mr. Heuer over the years, most recently on
the subject of the history of the
Chronomatic / Caliber 12 movements. Still,
I had never met or even spoken with
Mr. Heuer.
So
much has been published about Mr. Heuer's
life story, and we have exchanged so many
e-mail messages over the last few months
on the subject of the Chronomatics, so
I decided that rather than the broad
"retrospective" type of questions about
his career, I would try to focus on some
very specific questions about matters that
would be of interest to the vintage
collectors, and fill in some of the pieces
of his life story that I had never seen
discussed. International Watch magazine
will be publishing portions of the
interview transcript within the next few
months. In the meanwhile, let me at least
list some of the topics that we covered
during our 70-minute
conversation:
- how
Mr. Heuer learned about "branding" and
"marketing" during his early years in
the United States;
- his
experiences as a ski racer and
automobile rally driver / navigator,
and how these activities led to Heuer's
development of timepieces;
- his
role in developing the Abercrombie
& Fitch Seafarer, while studying
engineering in college;
- the
question that all the collectors face:
"If you could keep only one Heuer,
which would it be?";
- why
the "Pasadena" chronograph was named
the Pasadena;
- how
the Heuers were associated with
horseracing, even before automobile
racing (and why the "Kentucky"
chronograph was named the Kentucky);
and
- what
happened to all the family archives,
from the early years.
I
was a bit surprised that the first 10
minutes of our conversation took the form
of Mr. Heuer asking me questions, as he
wondered how a lawyer from Atlanta,
Georgia came to the hobby of collecting
old Heuer timepieces and developing a
related website. Mr. Heuer was also very
interested to hear about the size of our
vintage collecting community, in terms of
the number of collectors who buy and sell
these watches, participate in vintage
Heuer discussion forums,
etc.
In
the end, the conversation with Mr. Heuer
was a fantastic highlight of my visit to
Switzerland. And just in case you were
wondering about the flow of the
conversation, on the plane ride to
Switzerland, I had prepared four pages of
questions. During our conversation,
I didn't touch these questions, even
once.
At
the Bar, with Jean-Christophe Babin,
President and CEO of TAG-Heuer. This
"event" was certainly not on the calendar,
but after dinner, I overheard
Jean-Christophe Babin ask Rachel Branch,
when he would be able to meet Jeff. Being
the "can-do" person that she is, Rachel
introduced us right then and there, and
Jean-Christophe invited me to join him at
the bar for drinks. What a blast! No notes
or preparation, and no iPod for the voice
recording, but a fantastic conversation.
Among the topics:
- the
relationship between the Caliber 11 /
12 (from 1969) and the Carrera 360
(introduced last year);
- why
the Porsche 928 deserves supercar
status;
- why
sprinters and marathon runners have
different body forms (and why no
championship runner has ever won the
100m and the marathon);
- his
making the transition from selling
detergent to selling watches;
- the
amazing coincidence that we both (a)
have five children, (b) enjoy Alfa
Romeo sedans, (c) run major horological
enterprises [well, we do have two
out of three of these items in
common]; and
- how
TAG-Heuer and OnTheDash might share
some projects, in the near
future.
|
Click
on the image to see the watches:
Jean-Christophe is wearing the
newest of the Grand Carrera
series, the Caliber 17 RS2
(Titanium); I am wearing one
of the oldest Monacos (circa
1968/69). Photos courtesy of
Setsuo Sugiyama.
|
After
updating this Journal late Tuesday
evening, I spend some time on the phone
with my friend, Chuck Maddox, in
Chicagoland. As my co-conspirator /
technical advisor / support desk, Chuck
makes some recommendations regarding the
best way to convert / store / back-up the
audio files for the interview with Jack
Heuer. I have 70 minutes of audio, divided
into three segments, and that's a lot to
transmit by either FTP or e-mail. After
several attempts, we get the first two
segments onto Chuck's computer; the third
segment, which is the longest, will
continue to reside on my IPod and
laptop.
That's
all for now . . . highlights for tomorrow
expected to include (a) morning run along
Lake Neuchatel, (b) TAG-Heuer
presentations, (c) meeting more of my
friends / penpals, and last, but certainly
not least, the (d) Museum opening . . . at
which we will all see the meaning of
"trendy chic" attire, as
interpreted by TAG-Heuer folks and
hundreds of journalists from around the
world!
Good
night after a fantastic day in Neuchatel!
Light's out at 3:15.
|
|
Wednesday,
January 30, 2008
Two
hours and 45 minutes of sleep, and the
wake-up call comes at 6:00 a.m. But as
I tell the kids when we travel, "We
didn't come here to sleep." The run along
Lake Neuchatel is nice -- a bike-path
along the lake, that winds through a
couple of marinas, and recreation areas.
There is a "Pique-nique" area, which must
be far more elegant than the American
"Picnic" areas.
When
I return to the Hotel, I meet up with one
of my "internet freinds", Nic Green, from
the United Kingdom. Nic does curtains and
window treatments by day; vintage Heuers
by night, with the "Heuerboy" website.
[Can it be a coincidence that Nic does
the curtains, and Heuer enthusiast David
Devos does the paint and paper?] Nic
and I have corresponded for a couple of
years, traded the occasional chronograph,
and had the occasional "bump" on the ebay
auctions. It's interesting to learn that
he actually overhauls chronographs
himself, and also makes the vintage-style
straps. Great to meet a collector who not
has the reputation for buying and selling
the best of the vintage watches, but can
also work on them and operate a fine
looking website..
Todays'
program consists of TAG-Heuer's new
product introductions and interveiws with
senior TAG-Heuer executives. The program
is held at the Beau Rivage Hotel, situated
on the promenade in the Neuchatel town
center.
The
day opens with presentations by
Jean-Christophe Babin and Stephane Linder,
providing an overview of TAG-Heuer's
recent successes [yes, sales were
strong in January 2008, despite turmoil in
certain world markets], the current
positioning of the brand, and plans for
the future. The most notable of the new
products being introduced at the event are
two new extensions of the Carrera line,
the Grand Carrera Caliber 17 RS2 (top row,
in the group shown below) and the
Carrera Caliber 1 Vintage (bottom row).
The "Caliber 17 RS2" is clearly the star
of the show. It is made of grade 2
titanium, with red accents on the second
hand, the crown and the stitching of the
strap, and will be offered in a limited
edition of 1,000 pieces. The Caliber 1
Vintage has a very different look -- a
hob-nail finish on the dial and movement;
the simplicity of the movement evokes the
look of a vintage pocket watch. The Grand
Carreras haven't yet arrived in the United
States, so it's also great to be able to
see the full line "in the metal", and to
be able to see the new ones that will be
making their debut.
I had
imagined that this portion of the program
would not be terribly interesting; in
fact, it's great to see the full line of
Grand Carreras, and to hear about
TAG-Heuer's plans going forward. The brand
does seem to be on a roll these last few
years, and they seem to have
well-developed strategic plan for the
brand.
Memorable
moments from the day:
- walking
past a table of Japanese reporters, and
seeing one of them point my direction
and say something, in Japanese, about
"OnTheDash";
- hearing
TAG-Heuer executives discussing current
conditions in the luxury watch market,
with references to consumer confidence
in the United States and the collapse
of the sub-prime market . . . can't we
even get away from this mess, for two
days?
- seeing
the reaction of Jean-Christophe Babin
and Thomas Houlon (TAG-Heuer's
Innovation Brand Manager) to the
"Paintless Wonder", likely to be one of
the 10 Monaco prototypes, from 1968 /
1969. In connection with the Opening of
the new Museum, TAG-Heuer has been
saying that it is a company that is
focused on its heritage / the
DNA of the brand. Talking with
company executives, they do seem very
interested in the history of the brand
and the older Heuer chronographs . . .
exploring all the strands and mutations
of the Heuer DNA.
During
a break, the North American group does the
quick walk around the town center, with
the destination being Walder, everyone's
favorite Neuchatel chocolate shop. It's
great to be able to buy souvenirs for
everyone (family, friends and office
buddies), all in the same shop . . . but
that's been everyone's request: Swiss
chocolate, and nothing but Swiss
chocolate! Walking around the town and
interacting with the local residents and
shopkeepers is itself a lesson in Swiss
culture. They are friendly and kind, and
did I mention meticulous. The shopkeeper
at Walder is as careful in assembling my
one-pound assortment of chocolates as her
watchmaker counterparts might be in
assembling, adjusting and testing a
complicated chronograph movement.
Precision is everything in the Valley of
the Watches!
We
have some free time during the afternoon,
so Nic and I take the train up to La
Chaux-De-Fonds. After the climb up the
mountain, the air feels fresh and crisp,
and there is snow on the ground. La
Chaux-De-Fonds is TAG-Heuer's world
headquarters, and the very heart of the
"Watch Valley". Nic and I have set our
sights on a shop that speiclaizes in
horological antiques. As it turns out, the
shop is closed for the day, as the owner
is out of town. It's hardly satisfying to
press our noses against the glass, and
admire the ephemera and antique tooling,
but that's all we can do . . . at least
until the next trip.
|
International
Museum of Horology, La
Chaux-De-Fonds
|
Being
unable to buy any old watches today, we
must be content to look at them, so it's
up the hill to the Musee International
D'Horologerie [International Museum of
Horology]. Most of the areas of the
Museum are dedicated to clocks, but the
section covering 20th century watches is
interesting. The displays are grouped into
themes -- sport watches, automatic
watches, shock-proofing, calendars,
complications, etc. -- with a selection of
brands in each of the categories. Seeing
this excellent museum will be the
under-card or warm-up, for our main event,
the Opening of the TAG-Heuer 360 Museum,
later in the evening.
|
|
|
Museum
Opening and Party, Wednesday, January 30,
2008
Wednesday
evening were the big events -- the Opening
Ceremony for the TAG-Heuer 360 Museum, an
opportunity to look around the Museum, and
the "Underground Party" to celebrate the
Opening.
The
Opening Ceremony. The Opening ceremony
consisted of a conversation between
Jean-Christophe Babin, President and CEO
of TAG-Heuer, and Lewis Hamilton, Formula
One phenom and a TAG-Heuer ambassador.
Hamilton seemed genuinely interested in
TAG-Heuer, including its heritage and it
current line of watches. He seems excited
to have his name on the dial of a
TAG-Heuer watch, and to be looking forward
to many successful seasons in Formula One
and many more TAG-Heuer watches honoring
his accomplishments. Hamilton presented
Babin with one of his helmets, which will
reside in the Museum with another bright
yellow helmet, that of the legendary
Formula One champion (and TAG-Heuer
ambassador) Ayrton Senna.
Hamilton
and Babin were surrounded by an entourage,
entering and leaving the Museum, so it was
a thrill when -- as they were leaving the
Museum after the Opening ceremony --
Jean-Christophe stopped and introduced me
to Hamilton. Jean-Christophe told Hamilton
about my collection of vintage Heuers and
research into Heuer's history, and
operation of a related website, and
Hamilton asked me for the name of the
website. Come on Lewis, just say the word,
and we'll work with the boys at McLaren to
rip out some of those finicky electronics
and get you a good, reliable Rally Master
pair!
The
TAG-Heuer 360 Museum.
Turning to the
physical aspects of the Museum, the Museum
takes a multi-level approach to its
displays, with the room (200 square
meters) divided into three vertical
spaces. Going from the ceiling down to the
floor, these three zones are intended to
represent the watch itself -- the crystal
at the top, then the hands, and finally
the dial and registers.
|
|
|
Interior
photos of the Museum. Click to
see larger photos.
|
- The
Crystal. Suspended overhead, going
all the way around the room, is a 360
degree circular video screen. TAG-Heuer
reports that the panoramic screen is
supported by 12 high-performance
retro-jectors, synchronized into a
single moving 360 degree centripetal
image, with 2 million animated images.
Whatever the technical specifications
may be, any visitor will see a very
high-tech presentation of the familar
TAG-Heuer images and ambassadors --
Fangio, Siffert, McQueen, Senna, Prost,
Raikkonen, Gordon and Hamilton on the
track; Tiger Woods; Maria Sharapova; .
. . all the ambassadors, moving around
a giant 360 degree screen. The video is
fast-moving and rich with images;
I probably saw it five or six
times during the evening, but noticed
many different images and details with
each viewing. It's almost as if you
want to walk to the other side of the
room, and watch the whole thing
again.
- The
Hands. Just as the hands of the
watch mark the passage of time, at eye
level of the Museum, we see a series of
display cases (totalling 50 meters in
length) that show the timeline of the
Heuer brand. This timeline is composed
of 51 backlight panels that tell the
story, 16 separate display cases for
the timepieces and other historic
items, and eight video screens. For
example, the displays covering the
1960's highlight John Glenn's stopwatch
(1962), the introduction of the Carrera
(1964), and the development of the
first automatic chronographs and Steve
McQueen (1969). In the 1970's, we see
the see the progression of electronic
watches and timing equipment.
- The
Dial / Registers. Moving from the
ceiling, to eye level, to now to waist
level, the visitor sees nine
floor-mounted, circular display cases
(which represent the dial and registers
of the chronograph). Each of these nine
display cases is dedicated to a
specific theme, as follows:
- Great
Inventions
- From
Pocket to Wrist
- Modern
Times
- The
Dream of Flight
- Legendary
Tracks and Races
- Famous
Partners
- The
Call of the Sea
- Technology
+ Function = Design
- Watches
for Women
These
themetic displays are an effective way
to present the watches. We see
connections between the timepieces
built for a specific function, across
different time-periods. For example, in
the "Dream of Flight" display we see
the common elements that connect the
aircraft instruments from the 1930's,
the mechanical pilots watches of the
1960's, and navigational watches of the
1980's. Similarly, in the "Call of the
Sea" display, we see the
Mareographe watch from the 1950's, the
Skipper chronograph from the 1960's,
and the yachting timers from the
1970's. Moving from one watch in the
case to the next, the viewer is left to
discern the shared elements of these
watches, while also seeing how the
executions changed over time.
There
is an interesting lesson in reviewing the
watches selected for display in the
showcases. While TAG-Heuer owns many
models and variations of most of these
chronographs (for example, the Caliber 11
/12 Autavias), only a limited number of
the versions are on display in the Museum.
Of course, the selection among the
Autavias is obvious, as the Museum
displays the "Chronomatic" version worn by
the legendary Swiss Formula One driver, Jo
Siffert. Similarly, we see the Steve
McQueen version of the Monaco and the
super-rare "black-eyed" Carrera 12 Dato,
rather than the more common versions of
these models. Perhaps the Museum
illustrates an important lesson for the
collectors, suggesting that we should seek
the rare and interesting, rather than
simply trying to "check the boxes" as we
seek to own and display every version of
every chronograph!!
Our
Community's Contribution. It was very
satisfying to see the timepieces that
members of our online community of vintage
collectors had provided for the Museum.
Among these timepieces were the Monaco
actually worn by Steve McQueen during the
filming of Le Mans (big shout out to David
and Don); the German pilots (flieger)
chronographs, circa 1935 / 1940, provided
by Nic (and, yes, I will forgive him the
ebay "snipe" that took that one of them
out of my hands, with only four seconds
remaining); and the "soldier's story", a
18 karat, triple-calendar chronograph,
engraved to mark a U.S. soldier's visit to
Basle in March 1946, and which ended up
with an estate auctioneer in Florida.
While most collectors will rarely part
with their treasures, there is
considerably less pain when the shipping
address is "Mathilde Tournois . . .
TAG-Heuer 360 Museum, La Chaux-de-Fonds,
Switzerland".
The
Underground Party. After the Opening
Ceremony, we moved to the "Underground
Party", which was "underground", in the
literal sense. TAG-Heuer had transformed
its underground parking garage into a huge
party room, and it looked great. The
furniture was funky; the theme for the
decorations was "Under Construction"; food
and drink was abundant.
It's
All About "Trendy Chic".
The invitation for
the Museum Opening and Party announced
that the attire for the evening was to be
"Trendy Chic". For a (boring) corporate
attroney, who spends 250 days per year
deciding whether (a) the suit will be
gray or navy, (b) the oxford shirt will be
white or blue, (c) the collar will be
button-down or pointed, and (d) the
shoes will be black or cordovan, the
concept of "Trendy Chic" attire for a
late night party in Switzerland evoked
nothing less than panic. Like any good
researcher, I quickly turned to Google,
but searching "TAG-Heuer" and "trendy
chic" yielded no useful information. The
situation got even worse when
I broadened the search to
"TAG-Heuer" and "chic".
I learned that TAG-Heuer had done
"sleek
chic"
for an event in Singapore, July 2006; and
TAG-Heuer described the woman's Monaco as
"retro-chic";
and the women's Carrera was stated to be
"classically
chic",
but "trendy chic" seemed to be a whole new
look, even for TAG-Heuer. Still, it was
useful to know that "trendy
chic" must be something other than
sleek chic, retro chic or classical chic .
(I should add that a quick visit to
TredyChic.com turned out to be a complete
waste of time; click
here,
and you'll see why.)
As
it turned out, the phrase was a source of
confusion for many of the guests, and
there was much discussion of the phrase
during the events before the Museum
Opening and Party. In the end, everything
worked out well -- my black corduroy
velour jacket was almost identical to the
one worn by Stephane Linder, TAG-Heuer's
Director of Design and Marketing.
I continue to wonder about the fact
that Stephane's jacket had the elbow
patches? Come on Stephane, get out of the
shell and live a little!
|
Trendy
Chic =
Corduroy Velour.
|
Spending
Time with My Heuer Friends. For me,
the highlight of the evening was spending
time with some of the folks previously
known to me only by e-mail messages,
discussion forum postings, and telephone
conversations. The following gallery shows
some of my "Heuer Friends" -- the faces
that I was able to match with previous
e-mail messages and phone calls. Across
the top row are (left photo) Jack Heuer,
Honorary Chairman of TAG-Heuer, and Rachel
Branch, Director of Public Relations and
Events, North America, and (right photo)
Jeff Stein with Valentine Balmat,
International Press Relations Manager. The
middle row shows Mathilde Tournois,
Curator of the TAG-Heuer 360 Museum, with
two of her "suppliers", Nic Green
[a.k.a. "Heuerboy"] and Jeff
Stein. The third row is our John Glenn
row, showing (left photo) Fabienne
Chalchat-Lambert, Public Relations
Manager, and (right photo) Gary
Girdvainis, Editor-in-Chief of
International Watch, and Jeff Stein. Gary
and I publicized the discovery that John
Glenn wore a Heuer stopwatch on the United
States' first orbital space flight, in
February 1962; Fabienne is standing in
front of the Museum display, which she
helped to prepare.
Robo-Chrono.
One week before the opening of the Museum,
I had received a very rare chronograph --
the Ford Split Lap Unit 77 -- made by
Heuer to celebrate the rally championship
won by the Ford RS team. As we approached
the opening of the Museum, I was curious
about whether the Museum would have one of
these freaky-looking things (known among
friends as "Robo-Chrono"), and I had also
decided that this would be my "Trendy
Chic" watch. As it turned out, "Yes,
there is a "Robo-Chrono" in the Museum,
but "No" it is not operating; and "Yes",
Robo-Chrono was the epitome of trendy
chic, drawing rave reviews from the very
trendiest, chicest people at the Party
[you know who you
are].
The
night ended on a perfect note, with a
gentle snow falling as the left the Party
for the ride back to Neuchatel. What a
disappointment it would have been to have
come to Switzerland in January, and not
have seen some snowfall. Doesn't it look
nice against the backdrop of the blue
Ferrari!
|
|
Some
Reflections on the
Trip
January
31, 2008
This
"press junket" to the Museum Opening
seemed like a great opportunity -- a
wonderful escape vacation; a chance to
finally meet some of my internet / e-mail
buddies; an opportunity to spend some
minutes in a room-full of vintage Heuer
timepieces. All these realms were
phenomenal . . . the beautiful hotel, the
wonderful people, and the Museum itself .
. . all better than expected; any one of
them reason enough to make the trip.
Beyond these realms, however, the real
surprise from my 48 hours in Switzerland
was the strength and confidence that I saw
in the TAG-Heuer brand. Senior leadership
of the company is energized; the results
with the recent watches have been
impressive; and there is confidence that
the future of the TAG-Heuer brand is even
more promising.
Ten
years ago, Heuer's "vintage collector"
crowd was in an awkward position. We loved
our old Heuer chronographs -- Autavia,
Carrera, Monaco, etc. But there was
considerable discomfort as we reviewed
TAG-Heuer's current offerings. Sure we
could show off our old Rally-Master timers
or McQueen Monacos on the discussion
forums, and get the "thumbs up" from the
other collector cummunities, every single
time, but to put the "TAG" and the hyphen
in front of the "Heuer" was the equivalent
of asking for a beating. Walking into a
store and looking at the line-up was also
painful. Yes, TAG-Heuer had the cool
advertisements and slick store displays;
yes, they had the ambassadors and slogans;
and yes, we could take pride in Heuer's
heritage, but inevitably the discussion
would turn to the question, "What about
the watches?" As ranchers in Texas say,
"Big hat, but no cattle" (or to continue
the bovine imagery, "All sizzle, no
steak").
Writing
in the early days of 2008, it is great to
report that the cattle have arrived. It
saw them in Neuchatel and also in La
Chaux-De-Fonds. Whether it's the
innovation and accuracy of the Carrera
360, the technical marvel of the new
Rotating System, or the beauty of the new
Caliber 1, TAG-Heuer has the motors. Heft
the case, study the finish of the dial, or
operate the pushers and crown, and you
realize the strength of the entire
machine.
The
Heuer guys -- both vintage and modern --
often speak in automotive imagery, and
celebrate the courage and charisma (and
DNA) of the brand's racers and leaders, so
we'll close with a simple wrap up on the
two days in Switzerland. I went to La
Chaux-De-Fonds to explore Heuer's history
-- to see some the old watches, to learn
more about some legendary racers (Siffert,
McQueen and Senna) and to have a
conversation with Jack Heuer, the last
generation of Heuer family leaderhsip. I
am delighted to be leaving Switzerland
having learned more about Heuer's unique
history, but also energized by the brand's
future prospects, with its newest racer,
Lewis Hamilton, and its newest leader,
Jean-Christophe Babin. For those who
cherish the vintage Heuers and their
history, let me report that our Heritage
is in very good hands.
copyright
Jeffrey M. Stein, 2008
|
|
|
|