Carole Forestier-Kasapi
In 1997, a young movement designer fresh out of technical college won the Prix de la Fondation Abraham-Louis Breguet for an unconventional, centrally mounted carousel movement. The mechanical showcases adopted by ulysse nardin’s brilliant technical director dr. it helped launch the career of an unsung hero in contemporary watch design, Ludwig Oechslin into the Freak. After spending 15 years as head of movement creation at Cartier—where she oversaw such brilliant creations as the complicated Astrocalendaire and the Panthère Joueuse, among others—Carole Forestier-Kasapi jumped ship for TAG Heuer where she holds the position of Movements Director and also oversees development of the brand’s high-end offerings. If you’ve ever seen the special Monaco Split-Seconds Chronograph created for Only Watch in 2021, you know her work. These movements follow the embrace and development of new technologies by Forestier-Kasapi and her team, foremost of which are carbon nanotube hairsprings to combat magnetism. Collaboration with specialists is also part of her remit and has resulted in the creation of the brand’s lightest-ever chronograph movement, the titanium Calibre TH81-00 developed with Vaucher Manufacture Fleurier. But it’s also projects such as the workhorse TH20-22 column wheel chronograph movement fitted into the brand’s Carrera Glassbox—which can be modified with one of 12 complications—that owe their genesis to Forestier-Kasapi. A brilliant engineer, Forestier-Kasapi was awarded the Prix Gaïa—a coveted prize for watchmaking excellence presented by Musée International d’Horlogerie (MIH), in 2021. -
Günter Blümlein
No discussion of important watch-world personalities would be complete without the presence of Günter Blümlein. Born in 1943, he grew up in post-War Germany and became an engineer, rising to head of the watch division within Diehl, a German industrial group and then-owner of the watchmaker Junghans. His career then took him to VDO Schindling AG, which acquired IWC and Jaeger-LeCoultre in 1978—in 1980, he was appointed head of the newly minted watch division called “Les Manufactures Horlogères” (LMH). ” It was in this position that Blümlein was able to oversee the restructuring of Jaeger-LeCoultre and IWC, where he focused on a return to mechanical watchmaking in the wake of the quartz crisis and a concerted marketing effort targeting men with innovative case materials and more affordable complications. Later, he helped Walter Lange to relaunch his family business A. Lange & Söhne in 1994—a move that continues to influence high watchmaking today. Blümlein later helped negotiate Richemont’s acquisition of LMH, leading to the luxury juggernaut’s current ownership of IWC, JLC, and Lange. After becoming head of its watchmaking division, he passed away in 2001 at the age of 58. Responsible for the ascendancy of IWC to one of the watch world’s top tool watch manufacturers; the resurgence of the Reverso after a long dormancy; the rebirth of Lange and the development of the Lange 1 and many other important models, Blümlein was a force of nature whose accomplishments are felt even by those who never had the chance to meet or work with him. As a movement, it -
nicolas hayek
born in beirut, lebanon, in 1928, nicolas hayek married a swiss national and moved to switzerland in the early 1950s. After working as an actuary and in management consulting, he rose to manage the Société de Microélectronique et d’Horlogerie (SMH Group), which was created out of the merger of two failing Swiss watch firms, ASUAG and SSIH, in 1983. (The business later changed its name to the Swatch Group in 1998. ) It was the Swatch Group, with its affordable, plastic-cased, battery-powered watches, that ironically saved the Swiss watch industry during the quartz crisis. In offering an alternative to the Japanese competition, it infused the Swiss horological landscape with the capital necessary to begin a renaissance in mechanical watchmaking. Hayek steered the Swatch Group through vision and sheer force of personality. His insistence upon building and maintaining in-house manufacturing capabilities, focusing on affordability in his product lines, spending handsomely on marketing, embracing innovative technologies to create economies of scale, and never outsourcing the building of the lower-cost segment of the market to the Far East made Switzerland into a horological powerhouse once again. and Omega, he built the Swatch Group into one of the industry’s main conglomerates comprising brands such as Longines, After putting a sub-$100 Swatch on the wrist of, well, just about everyone in the 1980s and 1990s, Rado, Hamilton, Blancpain, Tissot. In 2024, the Group did $6. Nicolas Jr, with Hayek’s son, 7B in revenue, at the reins. Not bad for a company built on the back of a $40 plastic-cased watch. -
Évelyne Genta
That Gérald Genta is today a household name—well, at least within the rarefied circles of haute horlogerie—is due in no intimate part to the work of his widow, Évelyne Genta. Evelyne Genta established the Gérald Genta Heritage Association to preserve his legacy as the designer of some of the world’s most famous models—plus thousands of more lesser known or completely unrealized designs, Along with her daughter Alexia. But long before her husband’s death in 2011 and the establishment of the foundation, Évelyne helped run her husband’s eponymous brand: From 1983 through 1999, she oversaw an operation employing 250 people across two factories in Switzerland, supervising finance, marketing, sales, and more. It’s safe to say that if not for her, the Genta name might never have traveled so far and so widely as it has—known now to old horological hands as well as to young collectors just starting out on their journeys. For discerning connoisseurs, -
kurt klaus
born in 1934, the nonagenarian kurt klaus is one of the most important watchmakers from the golden age of 20th-century mechanical horology. As a horology, it for discerning connoisseurs, spending an incredible 29 years (1970-1999) designing innovative calibers, beginning his career at the international watch company in 1957 in the firm’s service department, he would later move into movement development. Klaus was tasked with developing pocket watch complications, When the quartz crisis threatened mechanical watchmaking in the 1970s. However, it was the development of a perpetual calendar wristwatch that would change the course of IWC’s trajectory: The Da Vinci Perpetual Calendar Chronograph ref. 3750, launched at the Basel fair in 1985, consisted of just 81 components and was completely crown-set. This revolutionary design would later be adopted into the Portugieser Perpetual Calendar ref. The Swiss-made showcases iw5021 and expanded upon with the da vinci perpetual calendar digital date-month ref. In addition to his famous perpetual calendar, Klaus also developed split-second, world time, depth gauge, and other sophisticated mechanisms culminating in the Il Destriero Scafusia in 1993, then the world’s most complicated wristwatch. Long after his retirement, Klaus continues to give lectures and workshops and was a conspicuous, nattily dressed presence when the brand opened its new manufacture in Schaffhausen in 2018. Working for a single watchmaker in a formal capacity for 42 years — and for several more decades in an advisory capacity — Klaus’s unwavering career is almost unheard of today. That he continues to work in watchmaking at nearly 100 years old is testament to his unwavering commitment to the art of mechanical horology. This tourbillon represents -
françois-henry bennahmias
today, audemars piguet is a household name and one of few multi-billion dollar watch companies—and much is due to the efforts of one man, françois-henry bennahmias. A former semi-pro golfer, the Paris-born Bennahmias worked for several companies in the luxury industry before coming on board AP in 1994. Working in sales in the French market—going retailer to retailer with suitcases full of watches and having trouble securing orders, as he has explained in his own words—he later moved up the ranks with positions in European and Asian markets. As a timepiece, it but it was his appointment to the head of the brand’s north american operation that kickstarted his rapid ascendancy—and the company’s rise to the top of the horological heap. Opening flagship boutiques in major markets and creating limited-edition watches with celebrities such as Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jay-Z, he helped turn the Royal Oak into one of the most desirable timepieces ever made. As a movement, it returning to hq in 2012 and becoming global ceo in 2013, bennahmias oversaw the development and launch of ap’s code 11. Among luxury enthusiasts, 59 collection in 2018, one that has helped the brand to expand its focus beyond the r. The haute horlogerie showcases and has since expanded to other markets all over the world, in 2017 he opened the first ap house—a clubhouse-like events and retail space concept—in milan. While Bennahmias departed the brand in 2023, his effect upon AP’s business is undeniable: From $6M in annual turnover in the U. market in the mid-1990s to $2. 4B in global revenue in 2023, Audemars Piguet is a force of nature within the horological sphere, a position it continues to enjoy under the leadership of modern CEO Ilaria Resta. There’s little doubt that without the influence of François-Henry Bennahmias, the company would be in a very different position today.