A true icon of contemporary watchmaking, Movado’s legendary Museum dial has a celebrated history. Inspired by the Bauhaus movement, this watch dial was designed in 1946 by American artist Nathan George Horwitt. He held that “we do not know time as a number sequence but by the position of the sun as the earth rotates.” Applying this theory, he eliminated the numerals and designed a dial defined by a single gold dot at 12 o’clock. Avant-garde to an unprecedented degree, Horwitt’s prototype was selected by the Museum of Modern Art in New York City for its permanent collection in 1959. Adopted by Movado, it has been one of the Swiss brand’s best-selling styles ever since. In this supremely understated new version, the intense black dial is enhanced by the gold-toned hands and the famous concave dot symbolising the sun at high noon, once again confirming the timeless nature of this design.