In November last year, Swiss watchmaker Vacheron Constantin released its Les Cabinotiers collection, which included two watches that encapsulate the spirit of exploration and artistic appreciation that has characterised the Maison since its inception. The watches are a homage to Art Deco and Arabesque art forms, which have left an indelible mark on global culture. The second watch in the collection, the Les Cabinotiers Minute Repeater Tourbillon — Tribute to Arabesque, features designs inspired by Abu Dhabi’s Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque.
The relationship between the Swiss manufacturer and the Middle East dates to 1800, when the Maison sought to expand its trade market. In 1817, Vacheron Constantin expanded in the Mediterranean to the cities of Smyrna and Constantinople, which were then part of the Ottoman Empire, and later, in 1865, to Egypt. In 1929, Vacheron Constantin presented a watch as a gift to King Fouad I at the request of the Swiss community in Egypt. The timepiece was “meant to showcase the pinnacle of watchmaking art”. Years later, the Maison again shipped a watch to Egypt, this time to King Farouk, who had inherited his father's love for fine watchmaking. At the time, the watch was heralded as the most complicated watch in the world. Many ruling families from the Middle East have since shown a penchant for Vacheron Constantin's creations, including King Abdelaziz al-Saudi of Saudi Arabia, one of the watchmaker's most well-known patrons. This relationship underlines the bond between Vacheron Constantin and the Middle East.