Christiaan van der Klaauw

Based in Netherlands, Christiaan van der Klaauw Astronomical Watches is the only atelier in the world that is completely devoted to the design and the production of exclusive, hand-made astronomical watches. This atelier was established in 1974 by Christiaan van der Klaauw, the most famous watchmaker in the Netherlands.

In 2014, the atelier celebrated its 40th anniversary of astronomical watches the fact that Christiaan van der Klaauw presented his first astronomical clock 40 years ago. He produced his first wristwatch with astronomical complications 20 years ago.

Christiaan van der Klaauw (1944) was born in Leiden, the city where the Netherlands’ greatest scientist of all times, namesake and inspiration Christiaan Huygens started his studies in 1645. Van der Klaauw attended the School for Instrument Makers (LiS) in Leiden, the curriculum established in 1901 at the initiative of Prof. Dr. Heike Kamerlingh Onnes.

Instruments
When Kamerlingh Onnes was appointed professor in experimental physics in 1882 it was common practice for the physicists to make their own instruments. The scientist considered this nonsensical and initiated the founding of the LiS. This trade school describes instrument makers  as  ‘handymen,  puzzle  solvers  and  inventors  who  use  their  technical  knowledge  and creativity to make just about anything conceivable’. This certainly applied and applies to Van der Klaauw who, in the course of his training, acquired practical experience at the Leidse Sterrewacht, the world’s oldest university-affiliated observatory, which was established in 1633. In this magical world of stars and planets Christiaan van der Klaauw’s love of astronomy burgeoned.

Celestial Bodies
Good instrument makers are able to make what their eyes can see and are certainly capable of making timepieces.  The  idea  of  combining  the  mathematically  predictable  movements  of celestial  bodies  with  a  clock  was  an  idea  that  was  certainly  not  unique  to  Van  der Klaauw.

Astronomical clocks had been made thousands of years earlier and the Netherlands had the Friesian Eise Eisinga (1744-1828), a virtuoso who had built a highly accurate planetarium in a house in Franeker. After Christiaan van der Klaauw had completed a clock maker’s course as well he moved from Leiden to Joure in 1967, where he started working for a producer of Friesian grandfather clocks.

Independent Watchmaker
In 1974 Van der Klaauw started his own business and presented his first clock, with astronomical complications. It was the start of an exceptional story that made him one of the best clockmakers in the world, saw him receive (in 1989) an honourable membership of the Swiss Académie  Horlogère des  Créateurs  Indépendants  (AHCI),  whose  members  include watchmaking  greats  such  as  Vincent  Calabrese,  George  Daniels,  François-Paul  Journe  and Franck Muller.

In 1992, he won the award for the most innovative movement design for his Pendule Variable in Basel, Switzerland. Two years later he started with his first wrist watch, the CVDK Satellite du Monde – with astronomical complications, of course. The watch showed the time, day and date, as well as the moon phase, day and night indicator and the place on earth where it is exactly noon at the time you are looking at your watch. It remains an amazing and elegant watch even today.

In 1999 he presented the masterpiece CVDK Planetarium, equipped with the smallest mechanical planetarium in the world. Making wrist watches was the start of a new phase in the life of the Netherlands’ most important watch maker.

New Era
In 2009, a new era began for Christiaan van der Klaauw. He was succeeded by the Dutch designer Daniël Reintjes. Daniël Reintjes had known Christiaan for many years, ever since he had asked him to produce watches for his own designer label ‘Dark Rush’. He got on extremely well with the watchmaker he respected so highly, brought Maurice Doppert and Maria van Laar into the project as fellow shareholders and started repositioning the brand. The new directors decided to focus exclusively on astronomical watches; the phrase ‘astronomical watches’ was added  to  the  brand  name  and  models  with  new,  beautiful  astronomical  complications  were added. This new direction was immediately rewarded by winning the Watch of the Year award in 2011 and 2012.

Collaboration with Van Cleef & Arpels
A unique event transpired at the SIHH in Geneva in January 2014. The legendary Van Cleef & Arpels presented its most complicated watch ever. The complication – a Planetarium module  created  exclusively  for  Van  Cleef  & arpels –  was  developed  by  Christiaan  van  der Klaauw Astronomical watches. This complex masterpiece was developed in three years. It has a self-winding mechanical movement containing 396 separate parts. The Planetarium with the name Midnight Planetarium Poetic  Complication™  fits  perfectly  in  the  worldwide  trend  and  increasing  demand  for astronomical watches as witnessed by watch brands.

The Christiaan Vander klaauw Signature
The main characteristic of the CVDK watches is the astronomical complication. Every watch has one or more complications that originate from astronomy. All watches feature the same, round case design. Each of CVDK watches is instantly recognisable, with the hour indexes above an imaginary horizon, the astronomical complication normally situated at the 6 o‘clock position, a radiantly decorated dial and a transparent caseback with a beautiful CVDK rotor.

And finally a stylised picture of the sun with 12 claws (Klaauw = claw) at 12 o‘clock, the sun’s zenith. All  these  beautiful  timepieces  are  made  with  great  attention  for  detail  and  only  the  finest and best materials are used for CVDK collection.

The atelier produces in such small quantities per year that each watch can be seen as a limited edition. All watches are therefore numbered.

Contact details
www.klaauw.com