There are designers who decorate time, and others who architect it. Gérald Genta undoubtedly belonged to the second category. An insatiable self-taught man, he shifted haute horology from its precious straitjacket towards steely modernity. Enduring legend: the Royal Oak hastily scribbled, the day before a trade fair, on the corner of a table. An even richer reality: a vision that merges ergonomics, geometry and culture — from marine portholes to ancient currency — to design icons. Five watches are enough to understand his language and the lasting influence he exerts today on Patek Philippe, Universal Genève and so many others.
When the Royal Oak arrives, “sport” fine watchmaking is an oxymoron. Genta imposes steel, the octagon, an integrated bracelet as flexible as a gold chain, and a visibly screwed aesthetic. We discover a luxury which assumes its mechanics, a taut, uncompromising design, of which the famous “Tapestry” concentrates the poetry.
The Royal Oak is the Genta manifesto: it elevates the tool to jewelry and imposes the idea of “sport-chic” as a new watchmaking nobility.
After the Royal Oak, Genta transposed its alphabet to Patek Philippe. The Nautilus is inspired by a porthole: side lugs, “monobloc” type case, dial with horizontal streaks. The result? A cosmopolitan traveler's watch, rugged enough for the ocean, dressy enough for dinner.
At Patek Philippe, Genta refines sport-chic by ridding it of the spectacular. The Nautilus remains the most serene incarnation of this attitude.
The Ingenieur had already existed at IWC since the 1950s; Genta reinvents it. The SL (“luxury steel”) adopts a round case with a bezel pierced with five recesses, an integrated bracelet and a taut caseband. Everything serves a technical purpose: resistance to everyday disruptions, in the spirit of a professional instrument that has become an object of style.
More technical than demonstrative, the Ingenieur SL reminds us that Genta design is born from a constraint that it sublimates into character.
Born from the Bulgari Roma of 1975, the Bulgari Bulgari transforms the bezel into a manifesto: double logo engraved like an imperial inscription, cylindrical case without roughness, purity of lines. Genta invokes ancient currency and Italian architecture to create a conceptual, unisex jewelry watch ahead of its time.
The watch proves that Genta knows how to speak the language of jewelry houses without denying its grammar: exact proportions, strong symbolism, timelessness.
At 23, Genta signed the Polerouter for Universal Genève, designed for the SAS polar lines. Slender case, twisted horns, dial often with a stylized Maltese cross: mid-century charm, with a utilitarian vocation. The model will become a laboratory of technical finesse, particularly with the adoption of the micro-rotor which will mark the history of the brand.
The Polerouter already reveals Genta's obsession with balance: elegance of curves, assured functionality, clear identity. It is the genesis of a style.
From the Royal Oak to the Polerouter, Genta works on three axes: geometry (octagon, cylinder, circle), integration (fused case and bracelet, continuous volumes), function (watertightness, finesse, robustness, readability). Its genius lies in the obvious: highly designed objects that seem to have always existed. Patek Philippe finds there a new sporting civility, Universal Genève an accessible modernity, Bulgari a cultural manifesto, IWC an instrumental rigor, Audemars Piguet an industrial myth.
Whether discovered vintage or reissued, these pieces remain disarmingly contemporary. Their secret? A form serving a purpose, proportions that flatter the hand as well as the eye, and this rare ability to tell the story of an era while going beyond it. Genta didn't design watches; he drew attitudes. This is why his creations, beyond fashion, continue to tell us the time in style.
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