Piaget’s long flirtation with the art world becomes literal here. The Andy Warhol Watch “Collage” Limited Edition takes the Black Tie lineage that Warhol himself wore in the seventies and dresses it for a different kind of gala. The stepped yellow-gold case recalls the piece Warhol owned, a deliberate nod to both his taste and Piaget’s own history with the design. On the wrist it reads as unapologetically bold. Those proportions and architectural flanks are part of the point. The case back carries the same metal, brushed to a soft sheen that contrasts with the dial’s gloss.
The dial is the show. Piaget builds it as a marquetry panel in ornamental stone, an old-world méthode applied with gallery confidence. Black onyx forms the base, echoing the colour of Warhol’s original watch. Thin slivers of yellow serpentine, pink opal and green chrysoprase are then cut and set into an abstract motif that mirrors one of Warhol’s celebrated collage self-portraits. The result is graphic, layered and tactile. It reads like jewellery first, timepiece second, and that hierarchy feels faithful to both Piaget’s métier and Warhol’s image-making. A green leather strap completes the palette without shouting over it.
Inside is Piaget’s in-house automatic movement, slim and refined to keep the watch elegant despite its presence. It carries a decorative engraving of the Warhol self-portrait that informs the dial, along with the Piaget signature. No water-resistance claims are made, which suits a dress watch that leans into craft rather than sport.
Context matters with this piece. The Black Tie silhouette, created by Jean-Claude Gueit in the early seventies, remains one of Piaget’s most charismatic designs. Warhol collected broadly and obsessively. Among the hundreds of watches in his possession, several were Piaget, and a handful eventually returned to the maison’s private collection. After formalising its relationship with the Andy Warhol Foundation, Piaget continues that dialogue here, focusing on colour and composition rather than literal iconography. No bananas. No soup cans. The inspiration is present but suggested rather than shouted.
Collectors will notice a few magnets for desirability. The yellow gold case is exclusive to this edition, and each marquetry dial, cut in natural stone, differs subtly from the next. For those who appreciate Piaget’s historic blend of jewellery craft and watchmaking, this is a pure expression of that DNA.
The Andy Warhol Watch “Collage” Limited Edition feels less like a celebrity co-sign and more like a thoughtful exchange. It is not shy, and its scale will divide smaller wrists, but the watch succeeds on its own terms. It captures a slice of Warhol’s colour logic and brings it into a form Piaget knows intimately, letting the gold do the talking when light hits those steps.
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