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What does the sky mean to those who measure it?

From that question, the entire Roger Dubuis experience was built. Its architecture drew directly from the Manufacture’s own sense of movement: concentric arcs, sweeping volumes, a ceiling that opened onto a projected night sky. Every surface carried the same curved, layered sensibility as the timepieces at the heart of this year's collection.

Visitors entered into near-darkness, moving through a circular space where each timepiece occupied its own position within the same celestial narrative. Light shifted across the surfaces as the constellations rotated overhead. The Gravity Windows displayed the novelties against star-chart backdrops. Further into the stand, the lounge offered a quieter setting for conversation, framed by the same deep-night atmosphere.

Written in the Stars

2026 Novelties

At the centre of this year's presentation: the Excalibur Biretrograde Perpetual Calendar. Its nine-layered dial architecture organises the perpetual calendar display across two retrograde indicators with the visual language of the Excalibur collection. The Poinçon de Genève-certified movement works within a case that makes the construction visible at every angle.

Alongside it, the Perpetual Calendar Quatuor arrived in Cobalt Chrome. The Brocéliande timepieces presented forest-inspired dials at twilight and dawn, while the two Lady of the Lake creations brought Métiers d'Art into dialogue with Arthurian legend.

The Excalibur Moonlight, a unique central tourbillon developed within the Rarities Program, completed the collection.