Skip to main content

Pocket Watch with Tourbillon

Movement (Swiss, 1747–1823)
Movement (French, 1776–1858)
Dateca. 1820
MediumGold, gilt brass, and steel
Dimensions3 1/8 x 2 5/16 x 2 5/8 in. (8 x 5.9 x 6.7 cm)
Credit LineBequest of Winthrop Kellogg Edey, 1999
Accession number1999.6.28
Commentary

Mechanical watches did not generally keep time as well as clocks because they were subject to constant movement, and unless their balance was perfectly poised, their performance varied when they were held in different positions. To eliminate this problem, Abraham-Louis Breguet invented the tourbillon (literally, whirlwind), a device that mounted the escapement and balance on a small carriage that averaged out the errors by rotating at regular intervals.

Source: Vignon, Charlotte. The Frick Collection Decorative Arts Handbook. New York: The Frick Collection/Scala, 2015.

Front view of Double-Dial Desk Watch Showing Decimal and Traditional Time
Abraham-Louis Breguet
ca. 1795–after 1807
Three-quarter front view of Carriage Clock with Calendar in a neoclassical gilt bronze case
Abraham-Louis Breguet
1811
Commode with Pictorial Marquetry Showing Classical Ruins and Floral Bouquets
Attributed to André-Louis Gilbert
ca. 1775
Front view of pendant watch with an enamel dial
Dutertre
ca. 1765
Front view of Mantel Regulator Clock showing the four suspended dials supported by a wood frame…
Charles Mugnier
ca. 1823
Terracotta bust of Peter Adolf Hall. He looks over to his right, and has a short wig on, parted…
Louis-Simon Boizot
probably 1775
A marble garden vase.
Jean-Louis Lemoyne
1727–28
Front view of Pocket Watch with enamel dial set in a case of gold
François Beeckaert
1750–55
Copyright © 1998-2025 The Frick Collection. All Rights Reserved.
InstagramFacebookXYoutubeThreadsmenusearch2