logo
The enduring legacy of Rolex's 70-year-old GMT-Master

The enduring legacy of Rolex's 70-year-old GMT-Master

Visitors to West Kowloon Cultural District's Freespace in Hong Kong between May 26 and June 8 can catch an exhibition on one of Rolex's most important models: the GMT-Master. The watch celebrates its 70th anniversary this year, an occasion that marks one of watchmaking's most elegant answers to the problem of tracking multiple time zones.
The watch and its namesake GMT complication gain their name from the addition of an extra watch hand that tracks time on a 24-hour index. The GMT hand can be set to one's home time zone, or to Greenwich Mean Time – also referred to as UTC or Zulu Time. The Longines Zulu Time from the 1920s also allowed for multiple time zones, but the 24-hour index of these watches was located within the minute track rather than on a rotating outer bezel. Armin Strom Dual Time GMT Resonance First Edition. Photo: Armin Strom
The GMT complication was mainly seen on pilot's wrists in the mid-20th century – indeed, Rolex developed the GMT-Master together with the historic airline Pan American Airways. Today however, anyone who travels frequently might consider getting one.
'Nowadays, we are travelling on planes more than ever,' says Helbert Tsang, co-founder of watch community The Horology Club, 'and the GMT-Master still looks pretty much as it did when it was first launched in the 50s. What has changed since then is the reason people buy and wear watches. What used to be an essential tool (for fliers) is now a luxury item or a status symbol. People working in front of a screen all day may still imagine themselves as a globetrotter or a commercial pilot landing at different destinations every day, and a GMT watch is the perfect prop for them to live out that fantasy.'
The GMT complication's history, combined with its surprisingly modern utility, has led to its consistent popularity. Unlike dive watches or chronographs – the functions of which have since been supplanted by computers – wearing a GMT watch means one can still use the complication to track time for loved ones in a different part of the world, or to recall important international meetings at a glance. Parmigiani Fleurier Tonda PF GMT Rattrapante 2025. Photo: Handout
Luxury brands now put design at the forefront of GMT watches to appeal to collectors. At Watches and Wonders in Geneva this year, manufacturers made their own efforts to show multiple time zones elegantly. Rolex interpreted their modern GMT-Master II with green Cerachrom and tiger iron dials. Panerai, Armin Strom and Parmigiani Fleurier chose to add additional complications with GMTs (respectively, perpetual calendar, simultaneous dual time display and rattrapante).
Tag Heuer, known for its racing chronographs and divers, added a Twin-Time model, which tracks the second time zone along a two-coloured internal 24-hour index, to its Carrera pieces.
Nomos Glashütte developed a new automatic movement and introduced a world time complication to their Club collection.•
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tang dynasty's links with the world on display at Hong Kong Heritage Discovery Centre
Tang dynasty's links with the world on display at Hong Kong Heritage Discovery Centre

South China Morning Post

time6 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Tang dynasty's links with the world on display at Hong Kong Heritage Discovery Centre

Modern Hong Kong youth might be surprised to find some kinship with life in the Tang dynasty capital, Changan, over 1,000 years ago. Just as Tang society blended Persian jewellery with music from the ancient Sogdian people, Hong Kong streetwear borrows from cultures around the world. This ancient cross-cultural fusion is on display at the Hong Kong Heritage Discovery Centre's exhibition, 'Tang Vogue Beyond the Horizons: A Golden Era of Multicultural Integration and Openness'. 'At its peak, Changan, the Tang dynasty capital, was a multi-ethnic, fashion-forward capital – a city of polo matches, tea-drinking, theatrical performances, acrobatics and music spilling into the streets,' said Sam Wu Man-lap, a curator at the Hong Kong Heritage Discovery Centre. The ancient imperial city was located northwest of modern-day Xian in Shaanxi province. Visitors to the exhibition can see examples of Persian-inspired gold ornaments, pottery and luxury imports that speak to the cosmopolitan flair of the Tang dynasty (618-907). Wu explained that Tang fashion often made a statement: bright silks, bold patterns and foreign-inspired cuts. Women rode horses, wore male garments and embraced diverse ideals of beauty. Sam Wu is a curator at the Hong Kong Heritage Discovery Centre. Photo: Handout By framing these artefacts alongside the narrative of Changan's vibrant culture, the exhibition invites Hongkongers to recognise a shared love of self-expression and cultural fusion across the centuries. Organised by the Antiquities and Monuments Office in partnership with the National Cultural Heritage Administration, the exhibition assembles 298 artefacts from 28 museums and cultural institutions across mainland China – including 49 cultural relics and 29 Tang-era pieces unearthed in Hong Kong itself. Across eight thematic sections, visitors will encounter the opulence of Tang dynasty politics, the dynamism of its cities, the ingenuity of its artisans, the diversity of its religions, and the far-reaching networks of its land and maritime trade. According to Wu, the event is a living conversation between history and the modern city. 'This exhibition showcases how the Tang dynasty was a true melting pot of cultures, ideas and styles – something Hong Kong's young generation can really relate to today,' the curator said. 'The vibrancy of Changan, with its daring fashion and open-mindedness, mirrors the energy and diversity we see on our city's streets.' Hong Kong's connections to the Maritime Silk Road The exhibition also aims to bridge the history of trade routes between Guangzhou and Hong Kong. In Tang times, Guangzhou was the empire's most important maritime port. Ships departing its docks sailed through Hong Kong's waters – particularly near Tuen Mun – using the area as a mid-route replenishment stop. Archaeological finds from Hong Kong, including Changsha pottery, Tang coins and silverware, confirm its role as an active node in a global trade web. This history affirms that Hong Kong's outward-looking, trade-oriented identity is not a recent phenomenon, but a legacy woven into its geography. 'This exhibition is not about locking history in glass cases. It's about showing students that the Tang dynasty's energy, creativity and global reach are part of their own heritage,' Wu said. 'Every artefact tells a story that connects the past to the present – and to Hong Kong's place in the world.' Pieces you should check out Wu hopes students feel inspired knowing that history is not just about dusty relics but about bold people who shape a connected world. For Hong Kong's younger audience, these artefacts shine as portals into the Tang world. Gold jie hair ornament: Excavated in Yangzhou, this intricate openwork ornament with Buddhist-inspired celestial figures embodies the Tang dynasty's high-fashion spirit. It reminds us that Tang women, with over 140 recorded hairstyles, embraced a freedom of style that feels strikingly modern. Tang dynasty women often wore decorative ornaments in their hair, called 'jie'. Photo: Handout Silver fragment inscribed with 'Wan Sui Duan Zhou': Unearthed on Lantau Island, this piece is a rare, tangible link between Hong Kong and the Tang dynasty's bustling maritime Silk Road. It bears the name of a Tang-era silver-production centre, called 'Duan Zhou', and the auspicious phrase 'Wan Sui'. It likely travelled from the Xi River to Guangzhou before being loaded onto ships bound for Southeast Asia, South Asia and beyond. The silver fragment's presence in Hong Kong could point to a shipwreck in local waters, or it could reflect Hong Kong's role as a stopover, where vessels anchored for supplies and repairs, or to await favourable winds before resuming their journey. This fragment of a silver piece is believed to have come from present-day Zhaoqing in Guangdong province. Photo: Handout Gold ornament decorated with a standing phoenix and inlaid with turquoise: This ornament blends motifs from Persia and Central China. The turquoise beads and gold are crafted into an intricate design that reflects the multicultural influences on fashion at the time. This gold ornament is from the collection of the Qinghai Tibetan Medicine Culture Museum. Photo: Handout 'Tang Vogue Beyond the Horizons: A Golden Era of Multicultural Integration and Openness' is on display until December 31 at the Hong Kong Heritage Discovery Centre in Tsim Sha Tsui. Entry is free.

Hong Kong's Cathay offers first post-Covid voluntary unpaid leave in 2 straight quarters
Hong Kong's Cathay offers first post-Covid voluntary unpaid leave in 2 straight quarters

South China Morning Post

time16 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong's Cathay offers first post-Covid voluntary unpaid leave in 2 straight quarters

Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Pacific Airways has offered voluntary three-month unpaid leave to cabin crew for the first time since the pandemic for two consecutive quarters, amid modest profit growth forecasts. The company informed its Hong Kong-based cabin crew that applications were open for the fourth quarter of this year via an internal memo, a copy of which was seen by the Post. A source told the Post that the move followed the offering of a first round of unpaid leave of up to three months this year, between July and September. A spokesman later confirmed that the measure was entirely voluntary and on a short-term basis, with the first round of leave introduced earlier. 'To provide our cabin crew with greater flexibility to meet their personal needs, especially with the year-end festive season approaching, we are pleased to announce the opening of voluntary unpaid leave applications for up to three months from October to December 2025,' it said. The Post also saw a copy of an internal memo issued on May 16 that told staff about the first period of unpaid leave.

Conditions, social media blamed for more fights aboard Hong Kong flights
Conditions, social media blamed for more fights aboard Hong Kong flights

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

Conditions, social media blamed for more fights aboard Hong Kong flights

Read more: Confined space, a lack of legroom, stress-provoking boarding procedures and airlines' cost-saving measures are a recipe for conflicts among air passengers, observers say, following a number of heated disputes aboard Hong Kong flights. Experts add that social media has fuelled a 'copycat effect' in which people imitate disruptive behaviour and aggressive responses they have seen online.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store