The Audemars Piguet Coussin Tortue chronograph is a circa-1930 platinum wristwatch offered in Christie’s Rare Watches sale in Geneva on May 11 and 12, 2026. The single-button chronograph features a cushion-shaped case, two-tone dial, and movement from the brand’s earliest wrist chronograph production period. Christie’s describes the watch as historically significant, with the piece appearing publicly for the first time since its manufacture nearly a century ago.
The model, numbered 41’849, is estimated at CHF 200,000 to CHF 400,000. Its monopusher construction controls the chronograph functions through one button, reflecting early experimentation in compact wristwatch complications. Audemars Piguet restored the watch after it remained with the original owner’s family for more than 90 years, adding provenance to one of the brand’s rarest surviving early chronographs.
Rare Chronograph Sales
Audemars Piguet Coussin Tortue Chronograph Heads to Christie’s Geneva
Trend Themes
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Revival of Heritage Timepieces — Authenticated century-old wristwatches are commanding renewed collector interest and premium pricing, highlighting potential for new provenance and authentication ecosystems.
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Surge in Auctioned Vintage Complications — Increasing visibility of early monopusher chronographs at high-profile sales is shifting secondary-market values and creating demand for specialized valuation tools.
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Provenance-driven Valuation — Watches with continuous family ownership and documented restoration histories are attracting outsized bids, underscoring opportunities for immutable provenance records and provenance-based pricing models.
Industry Implications
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Luxury Watchmaking — Heritage releases and archival restorations are becoming brand differentiators, creating room for timepiece reissue programs and certified-original sales channels.
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Auction Houses — High-profile single-owner presentations and record estimates are transforming lot curation and marketing strategies, pointing toward hybrid digital-physical bidding ecosystems.
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Restoration and Conservation — Demand for sensitive, historically accurate restorations is increasing, encouraging development of standardized conservation certifications and specialist service networks.