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1036Σ

Cartier

Ref. 2554

Tank à Vis “Wandering Hours” CPCP

A rare and sought-after white gold wandering hours wristwatch with date and certificate

Estimate
HK$120,000 - 240,000
€13,300 - 26,500
$15,400 - 30,800
HK$241,300
Lot Details
Manufacturer
Cartier
Year
Circa 2000s
Reference No
2554
Movement No
58
Case No
58
Model Name
Tank à Vis “Wandering Hours” CPCP
Material
18K white gold
Calibre
Manual, cal. 9902MC, 24 jewels
Bracelet/Strap
Crocodile
Clasp/Buckle
18K white gold Cartier deployant clasp
Dimensions
28mm width x 40mm length
Signed
Case, dial, movement and clasp signed
Accessories
Accompanied by blank Cartier certificate stamped Carson Watch Hong Kong, red leather folder, associated presentation box and outer packaging.
Catalogue Essay
In the late 1990s, Cartier's Privée Collection Paris introduced a modernized version of the Tank Étanche, known as the Tank à Vis, offering three complications: time-only, wandering hours, and dual time. This present lot is the wandering hours variation, certainly the most mechanically interesting out of the three, which features a creative time display method developed by the Campani brothers in the 1600s for the Pope's clock. The mechanism displays time using rotating discs instead of traditional hands, which is both visually appealing and mechanically intriguing. The curved aperture at 12 o’clock shows the wandering hours disc, while the minutes are indicated by a blued central hand. Powered by the ultra-thin calibre 9902MC, it is beautifully decorated and visible through a display case back.

Numbered 58 and encased in white gold, the timepiece features a dial that is engine-turned with a beautiful rosette flower motif, the symbol for watches from the limited Cartier Paris Collection Privée (CPCP) line, the present lot is preserved in excellent overall condition and is a superb quirky yet fun addition to your collection.

Cartier

French
With the Constitution of 1848 came a new standard for luxury in France. Founded one year prior by Louis-Francois Cartier, the house of Cartier was one of the first to use platinum in jewelry making. This incredibly expensive material became the stepping-stone for Cartier to experiment in form, mechanisms and attitude. It helped men move from pocket watches to wristwatches, effectively making the watch much more functional and prominent in a man's overall wardrobe.Cartier did not only touch on functionality. Inspired by a commissioned painting by George Barbier featuring a black panther at the feet of an elegantly bejeweled woman, Cartier began incorporating wild animals in his designs—most notably, Cartier Panthère rings, bangle bracelets and watches. Yet it wasn't until the late 1960s that the house of Cartier debuted their iconic yellow and rose gold LOVE collection, which includes the famous bracelet that only a special screwdriver can open. 
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