270th Anniversary

La Quête du Temps

La Quête du Temps

A Masterpiece beyond watchmaking

To mark its 270th Anniversary, Vacheron Constantin presents La Quête du Temps, 
a mechanical marvel and a tribute to the Maison’s legacy seven years in the making. Monumental in scope, this clock explores the intimate connections between time, 
the cosmos and human ingenuity, building on a tradition that goes back to Antiquity. 
This endeavour also inspired the new Métiers d’Art Tribute to the Quest of Time, 
a double-sided wristwatch that translates the ambitions of La Quête du Temps 
into a wearable format.

Origin Architecture of time The Astronomer La Quête du Temps x Le Louvre

Origin

A tribute to the Age of Enlightenment 
and the eternal human fascination with Time

Merging horological mastery, decorative arts, precision engineering and the poetry of movement, La Quête du Temps is the first-ever timepiece to feature an automaton as a functional time-telling complication. This celestial figure, a mechanical Astronomer, indicates the time through choreographed gestures in a mesmerising display of sound and motion.

Image illustrating a entire automaton in gold on a watch complication
Image illustrating the clock and its rotating circles representing the celestial vault
Image illustrating  the solar system on the base of the clock

ARCHITECTURE OF TIME

Three dimensions, 
one masterpiece

The Dome - A celestial vault and a theatre for time The Astronomical Clock - A multi-complication engine of celestial precision The Base - Foundation of movement, sound, and symbolism

ARCHITECTURE OF TIME

Created in Harmony

Over seven years of development, La Quête du Temps 
brought together more than 15 expert disciplines, each pushing 
the boundaries of their craft. From fine watchmaking to sculpture, 
from celestial mapping to musical composition, this masterpiece 
was born from collaboration, curiosity, and shared imagination.

Image illustrating the hand-drawn clock
Image illustrating a gold scorpion and a blunt object

Achitecture of Time

A constellation of talents

At the heart of this collective quest is a mission to celebrate horology: expressing humanity’s fascination with Time. Master watchmakers conceived the calibre and designed the dome, consulting with astronomers from the Geneva Observatory. François Junod, recognised as the world's greatest automatier, built the Astronomer and orchestrated the figure’s 144 fluid gestures, setting them to the music of an instrument created with composer Woodkid, who provided bespoke melodies for the three sequences. Extraordinary masters of every decorative art contributed to the miniature painting, engraving, gemsetting, marquetry, enamelling and more that adorn this masterpiece.

Achitecture of Time

Where time begins
with a gesture

Image illustrating a transparent half sphere with golden constellations on top

Each element, from the engraved constellations to the hand-painted celestial dome, was crafted with precision, passion, and purpose. It took six months of testing before a single stroke of the dome’s star map could be painted. Even the raw materials such 
as the rock crystal for the base required two years to source in the desired size and clarity.

This is more than an object. It’s a tribute to the power of human hands, minds, 
and dreams, united in a singular pursuit of beauty and excellence.

Image illustrating the hand-engraving of a constellation

The astronomer

A living sculpture of Time

More than a complication, the automaton of La Quête du Temps is a philosophical and emotional centrepiece. Designed as a celestial Astronomer, this figure performs 144 distinct gestures, indicating time with elegance and precision – a world first in horology. Its movements are fluid, silent, and natural, orchestrated through 158 cams and a mechanical memory system linked to the clock.

Highlighting the details of the artwork

La Quête du Temps x Le Louvre

La Quête du Temps:
The Exhibition at the Louvre Museum

Image illustrating the museum "Le Louvre"

From 17 September to 12 November, 2025, La Quête du temps is on view at the Louvre Museum in Paris, as part of an exhibition featuring 11 horological masterpieces from Antiquity, the Renaissance and the Enlightenment.

Image illustrating the work of art in its entierty

Image illutrating a watch with a gold automaton that tells the time

Métiers d'Art Tribute to the Quest of Time

A feat of miniaturisation 
and innovation