WT_2008_01: PROFILE: CUERVO Y SOBRINOS
Transcription
WT_2008_01: PROFILE: CUERVO Y SOBRINOS
Members of the Cuervo family at work in their shop Vintage advertisements and posters for Cuervo y Sobrinos watches and jewelry emphasized the elegance, sophistication, and affluence of early-20th century Havana. Prestigious watch brands such as Rolex and Longines used to make watches specifically for sale in the legendary Cuervo family store, known by aficionados as “La Casa.” 86 WatchTime February 2008 The limited-edition Robusto Chronograph with carbon-fiber dial On BY MARK BERNARDO Time t was a festive scene that conjured up images of 1950s Havana: an exhibition of vintage American luxury cars welcomed guests as impeccably dressed bartenders served mojitos and daiquiris from an old-fashioned bar. The heady aroma of cigar smoke hung in the sultry midsummer air while a female cigar roller plied her ancient trade for an enraptured audience. The appreciative crowd had its lifelines read by a Cuban fortune teller, lay bets on horse races, and admired the evening’s center- I Havana piece attraction: a replica of the original Cuervo y Sobrinos jewelry store with its mahogany display counter featuring a collection of luxurious timepieces — including three unique pieces created just for this occasion. This slice of cosmopolitan, pre-Castro Cuba was actually staged in Spain, on July 27th, 2007, at the famous Madrid Race Course. It celebrated the 125th anniversary of Cuervo y Sobrinos, the legendary watch-andjewelry company once regarded as the Cartier Driven from its native Cuba by Castro’s revolution, 125year-old Cuervo y Sobrinos is reclaiming its place among luxury watchmakers with its vintage-style timepieces. of Cuba, and now, after decades of dormancy and only three years in the U.S. market, one of the most interesting and distinctive of luxury watch brands. The brand encompasses four families, each named after a cigar size made popular by Havana’s world-renowned brands: Esplendido and Prominente watches have sensuously curved, Art Deco-inspired rectangular cases. Highlights include the Esplendido Monopulsante, a singlepush-button chronograph that houses the ex- February 2008 WatchTime 87 ing time, is at the heart of the Cuervo y Sobrinos marketing philosophy. An Age of Prosperity Cuervo y Sobrinos president Marzio Villa: after discovering watch movements and design sketches at the abandoned Cuervo store in Cuba, he decided to acquire the brand. clusive CYS 2450 caliber (built on a La Joux-Perret base movement) and is available in a limited edition of 199 pieces; and the Prominente Dualtime, with two independently running movements depicting two time zones on the dial. The Robusto and Torpedo lines have classic round cases. The former family includes the Robusto Tricalendografo Luna, a moon-phase watch; and the brand’s only divers’ model, the Robusto Buceador. The latter includes a GMT model and the Torpedo Pulsometro, with a pulsimeter scale on the dial calibrated to 30 pulsations. Each 88 WatchTime February 2008 model traces its design back to a sketch done in the company’s 1950s heyday. In another nod to its Cuban heritage, each comes packaged in a special wooden case that doubles as a highquality Spanish-cedar-lined humidor; once the watch is removed, its owner can store and age his premium cigars inside. The cigar theme reflects not only a link to Cuba’s most prestigious export but also the time-as-luxury philosophy of the brand’s Italian president, Marzio Villa. The image of the cigar smoker, enjoying his indulgence at a slow pace, unconcerned about pass- Like those of other businesses founded in Cuba that are operating elsewhere today, the story of Cuervo y Sobrinos is one fraught with intoxicating highs and devastating lows; a journey from success to near-extinction to new beginning. In 1882, Don Armando Rio y Cuervo and his brothers opened up a boutique on Havana’s fashionable Fifth Avenue, where they dedicated themselves to running and growing the watchmaking business founded by their uncle, Ramon (hence the name Cuervo y Sobrinos, Spanish for “Cuervo and Nephews”). By any standard, they succeeded. By the end of the 19th century, the shop (known as “La Casa”) became world-renowned, attracting such notable patrons as Albert Einstein, Clark Gable, Winston Churchill, and Ernest Hemingway — all of whose signatures are inscribed in the socalled “golden book,” the store’s legendary register. Three additional branches opened in Europe — in Baden, Germany; in Paris; and in the Swiss watchmaking city of La-Chaux-deFonds. The family brand became so prestigious that some fine watch brands sold at the shops put the Cuervo y Sobrinos name on the dials alongside their own logos. Today, it is easy to identify a vintage Rolex watch that was made specifically for Cuervo y Sobrinos. It was all part of a golden age for the thriving Cuban capital — and one that was destined not to last. “You have to remember what Cuba was like before Castro,” says Don FitzHenry, owner and president of Milestone Distribution, Cuervo’s exclusive U.S. distributor, based in Delray Beach, Florida. “It was the pearl of the Caribbean… where everybody went to see celebrities and be seen. The rich and famous vacationed there and had homes there. It was basically Las Vegas with an ocean.” FitzHenry admits that he and others at the company are still learning about much of its rich history, a history whose turning point came a little more than halfway through the 20th century, and one whose effects still reverberate throughout the world. PROFILE: CUERVO Y SOBRINOS Revolution and Rebirth The Torpedo Pulsometro has a pulsimeter scale calibrated to 30 pulsations. The Prominente Limited Edition Carbon Fiber, a limited issue of 125 pieces The Robusto Perpetual GMT features a perpetual calendar with moonphase 90 WatchTime February 2008 On New Year’s Eve, 1958, Fidel Castro and his guerrilla army seized power from Fulgencio Batista’s corrupt government and over the next several years initiated a series of socialist reforms that eventually nationalized most private land holdings and businesses. The result was a mass exodus of Cuban business owners. The proprietors of world-famous cigar brands like Montecristo, Romeo y Julieta, and Hoyo de Monterrey settled and started from scratch in south Florida, Central America and various Caribbean islands. The Bacardi family fled to Puerto Rico, where they rebuilt their rum empire into a household name. Cuervo y Sobrinos, by contrast, simply closed up shop. “It was as if, today, Cartier or Tiffany simply disappeared,” says FitzHenry, describing the impact the loss of this watch-and-jewelry Mecca had on Havana society. He goes on to relate the story of a Cuban-immigrant watchmaker who claims to have been an eyewitness to the last time the Cuervo family was ever seen in Cuba. “He was on the sidewalk when two cars pulled up to the Cuervo store and all the family members got out, carrying suitcases. They went in and packed up every single piece of product they could fit in the suitcases, got back in the cars and drove off. And that’s how fast the store closed down.” Unlike the Bacardis and others, the Cuervos had little chance to salvage their business in a new land: it had gotten so large that it had taken on several foreign investors, all of whom were ultimately scared off by the island’s repressive new government (Castro officially embraced Soviet-style Communism in 1961) and pulled their money out. About a month after the family cleaned out the flagship store, the worldwide company folded. In fact, Cuervo y Sobrinos may have been consigned permanently to history books and memories were it not for Villa’s fateful trip to Havana in 1997, where he visited the abandoned shop. Villa’s Madrid-based luxury goods company, Diarsa, distributes several watch brands in Europe, including Hublot, Parmigiani, Eberhard and Ulysse Nardin, and he had been seeking a brand to acquire. Walking through the building, the hairs stood up on the back of his neck as he noticed the dust-covered shelves and display cases, which had been mostly untouched for over 50 years. Apparently, fear of Castro’s notorious prisons was enough to discourage several decades’ worth of potential looters and vandals. Villa noticed a desk in a back office. “On top of the desk was paperwork,” he recalls. “You got the impression that somebody was in the middle of a workday and just got up from his desk and never came back.” In the safes, Villa discovered items of greater significance: one held a case with 25 vintage watch movements; another, a leather-bound book with sketches of all the 1950s-era watches that were being produced for the shop in its Swiss factories. Villa took it as a sign: he began the process of obtaining the Cuervo y Sobrinos brand, eventually setting up shop in Lugano, one of Switzerland’s major financial centers and home to a handful of Swiss watch firms. He brought the book of sketches to his Swiss watchmakers and asked them to recreate everything in it, but larger and thicker to accommodate modern tastes. “The idea was that anyone who remembered Cuervo y Sobrinos in the ‘50s could look at one of these pieces in a showcase today and it would be as if the last 50 years never happened,” says FitzHenry of the watches’ “time capsule” appeal. Villa hired FitzHenry — whom he knew at the time as one of Hublot’s independent sales representatives — to head up the U.S. operation. He also established the criteria that distinguish today’s Cuervo y Sobrinos wristwatches, the manufacturing of which is farmed out to a number of outside suppliers of hands, cases, and dials. Among these details are dials of enameled porcelain with applied numerals and logos; hand-sewn crocodile leather straps; bracelets with 1940s-style grain-of-rice links; and cases milled from a single block of excavated metal and heattempered — a process used in Cuervo y Sobrinos watches over a century ago. The first watches released under the reborn brand used the 25 movements recovered from the dusty safe in Cuba. PROFILE: CUERVO Y SOBRINOS Vintage Meets Avant Garde The road back was not always a smooth one for Cuervo y Sobrinos. In the beginning, one of the brand’s assumed strengths — its nostalgic appeal to the Cuban-American community — proved to be a short-term liability. The brand was launched in several large U.S. cities in September 2004, and sales were strong everywhere but the city with the largest Cuban presence, Miami. FitzHenry found that while young Cuban-American watch collectors embraced the brand, the older generation was downright hostile toward it, mistakenly believing that sales of these luxurious products were benefiting the despised Castro regime in Cuba. “We had to have a huge marketing campaign to educate people that the company was run out of Switzerland, totally removed from Castro,” FitzHenry recalls. (In fact, despite some misconceptions, the company never made watches in Cuba; the Cuervo family owned several factories in Switzerland that they used for the manufacturing.) Once the word was out, sales in Miami soared. The brand Cuervo y Sobrinos’s first tourbillon, with its carriage and hands made of silicon 92 WatchTime February 2008 has since expanded to nearly 30 stores in 15 cities nationwide and over 25 countries overall. The company’s commitment to go beyond nostalgia and retro design appeal, to create high-complication pieces that are both eminently collectible and technologically impressive, is evident in the models introduced at the 2007 Basel watch fair, several of which are limited editions commemorating the brand’s 125th anniversary. The Esplendido is one of Cuervo’s most historically significant watches; its design is similar to (and, the company suggests, may have preceded) the more famous Patek Philippe Pagoda. The new Esplendidos Retrograde boasts this family’s trademark 1940s styling and includes a retrograde date display on an arc at 3 o’clock, a small day-of-the-week subdial at 9 o’clock, and the 42-hour power reserve displayed at 6 o’clock. The case is steel and the dial features silver circular graining. Dial colors include cream, rosewood, tobacco, and silver, and the crocodile strap is available with either a pin buckle or folding clasp. Suggested retail is $4,400. A limited-edition Esplendido Chronograph, with the CYS monopusher Caliber 2450, debuted in June 2007, with pearling and engraving on the movement’s mainplate and bridges. Thirty-eight pieces are available: 28 in rose-gold cases and rosewood-colored dials, and 10 in white-gold cases with silvered dials. Art Deco is the theme of the curved-case Prominente, but the newest model gracefully melds vintage design with modern material technology. The limited-edition Prominente Chronograph incorporates carbon fiber into the dial and case. The heart of the dial and sides of the case display the material’s familiar checkerboard pattern, which catches light and shadow for an illusion of depth. The oblong, slightly concave case shape is uniquely comfortable on the wrist. In addition to the three chronograph-counter subdials (hours, 30 minutes, and seconds), the dial includes the series number of the watch (out of 125 pieces) and flowing, Art Deco-style numerals at 12 and 6 o’clock. This watch is offered on a black calfskin strap at a suggested retail price of $5,800. For the permanent Prominente The 125th Anniversary Esplendidos 2450 Chronograph, limited to only 38 pieces line, Cuervo has introduced the Prominente Single Time with Date, a non-complicated watch with a date window at 6 o’clock in steel ($3,300) or rose gold ($8,400) and in various dial colors. Carbon fiber also stars in one of the limited editions in the Robusto collection. The Robusto Chronograph Edition Carbon Fiber (also 125 pieces) uses carbon fiber on its round, 39-mm dial as well as on the sides of the case, and includes four subdials: hour and day of the week at 6 o’clock, 30-minute and month at 9 o’clock, date and seconds at 12 o’clock, and moon-phase display at 3 o’clock. It’s on a calfskin strap for $6,500. A non-limited version of this watch, the Robusto Chronograph 2859 with moon phase, joined the permanent collection this fall, with the typical enameled porcelain dial rather than a carbon-fiber one. It retails for $5,900. The Robusto Perpetual GMT (suggested retail: $24,000) is even more limited, at only 30 pieces. It features a rose-gold case and creamcolored dial with a subtle woven pattern and accents of brown, gold, and bronze. Powered by a self-winding Dubois Dépraz movement, the watch is a perpetual calendar with date at 3 o’clock, days of the week at 9 o’clock, months and leap-year indication at 12 o’clock, and a dual-time-zone display at 6 o’clock. It is adjusted to run without manual adjustment for 100 years. Like most every watch manufacturer that aspires to top-tier luxury status these days, Cuervo y Sobrinos has also released a tourbillon watch, the most exclusive of the Robusto limited editions. The Robusto Tourbillon (retailing at $115,000) is limited to only eight pieces. It features a rose-gold case and is powered by the 13¼-ligne CYS Caliber 2854, the first tourbillon movement in a Cuervo y Sobrinos watch. The company claims it is the first wristwatch with both its tourbillon carriage and hands made of high-tech silicon. Instead of the traditional round shape, this ultra-light carriage is crafted into a shape reflecting the brand crest. The watch has a 120-hour power reserve and a retrograde date display. The movement’s gold mainplate has an engraved illustration of Don Cuervo in his original Havana workshop — a fitting tribute to a bygone golden age. As for the future, Villa sees infinite potential for the revived Cuervo y Sobrinos brand. “We are already thinking about jewelry, perfume, objects of high value,” he says, “but that will come when the moment is right. Now the most important thing is to consolidate the line of timepieces.” On that front, plans are underway to launch a new ladies’ line of watches this year, and the company is taking steps toward producing its own inhouse movements in coming years. At 125, the fast-growing company is well on its way to recapturing its pre-Castro prestige. “So many years of history,” Villa said shortly after the anniversary gala in Madrid, “make us believe in the future.” ■ Cuervo y Sobrinos watches come in luxurious wooden boxes that double as cigar humidors.