For the second time, Bulgari collaborated with the famous Japanese architect Tadao Ando and announced the architect’s new interpretation of time, based on the concept of the growing Moon (mikazuki).
Perhaps right, perhaps wrong, to think that there could not be a more poetic watch than this, you’ll have to wait for the next time of Tadao Ando and Bulgari to find out.
 “People slow down to remember, they speed up to forget, ” said Milan Kundera, in his book slowness, thinking about the absence of emotions brought about by slowing down in our daily lives.
It may be difficult today, but reducing the heavy pressure of time on us can slow down. Maybe doing everything at it’s own pace, at the speed it should be, such as walking from one place to another, the distance between them is not too far, is one of the best ways to experience time.

Tadao Ando, a Pritzker award-winning Japanese architect (but a self-taught non-graduate architect, starting with an apprenticeship in architecture-related jobs), may have thought so, too. Maybe he walked to a sand garden to think about all this. His calm in the Zen garden may have carried in his mind the spiral lines of sand waves surrounded by heavy stones and taken them to Bulgari’s watch architects and showed them the spiral he had drawn on the paper. Pritzker award-winning Japanese architect Tadao Ando

We don’t know exactly what happened before, but we know the great results of Bulgari’s collaboration with Tadao Ando.








