Swatch’s New “Break Free” Watches Celebrate Keıth Harıng’s Artwork
Four decades ago, the folks at Swatch decided to host the first-ever World Breakdance Championship. This was no small thing for a Swiss watch brand, especially one that was founded just a year beforehand, in 1983. But unlike many makers from the cradle of high horology, Swatch didn’t have decades or centuries of history informing the way it did business. Instead, the new company was focused on innovation and breaking through to a new audience, while the impact of the quartz crisis—in which traditional mechanical makers were shaken to their core by the sudden and ubiquitous availability of inexpensive, quartz-driven models—was still reverberating throughout the watch world.
Besides, Swatch itself was in the business of quartz watches. And the attitude around them was all about accessibility, youth culture, and new, decidedly un-fussy wearers. “The values Swatch was built on, along with proudly being Swiss-made, have never changed,” explains Swatch CEO Alain Villard. “Joy of life, creativity, innovation, self-expression, and positive provocation are all here to stay.”
Considering all that, a breakdance competition in New York City made perfect sense—as did the decision to team with influential artist Keith Haring for the artwork promoting the event. Now legendary for his instantly recognizable iconography, Haring was right in the middle of his rise to fame at the time. His poster, plastered throughout the city, featured a breakdancer with a watch dial for a head below a hand-drawn Swatch logo.
“Swatch’s collaborations with Keith Haring have helped establish our long-standing relationship with the art world and solidified our reputation for pushing boundaries in design,” says Villard. “It’s an enduring connection that continues to resonate today, as consumers are drawn to the unique energy and cultural significance that his work represents.”
Now, after forty years, the artwork is finally showing up on an actual Swatch—two, in fact. A duo of Bioceramic What If? watches, available now, feature Haring’s artwork on the face. One is presented in full color. Another, in black and white. They’re joined by a reinterpretation of the watch gifted to the original competition winners, with artwork by Swiss design team Schmid & Müller.
A second drop from the “Break Free” collection, as Swatch is calling it, showcases something really special: a watch based on the original artwork given to Swatch and used to create the Modele Avec Personage watch from the 1986 collaboration with Keith Haring.