Why, how and how often time is checked is always characteristic of the spirit of the time ... but not always how it is displayed.
Benno Wili’s analog time indication resolves the generation-old contradiction of making minutes and seconds look longer than the superior unit of the hour.
Consequently, his artistic and philosophical contemplation of time as a measure of change has lead to the logical idea of displaying the time units as they are, namely the largest as the largest and the smallest as the smallest.
His vision of the Time Circle is embodied in three transparent rotating discs on which circles represent the units of time. Thus, your timepiece shows time as it is: the long hours by the large circle, the shorter minutes by the small circle, and the shortest seconds by the dot. It may be new, but nothing more than logical.
This creates a fascinating spectacle of time with exciting superpositions of the three time circles, up to the complete circle – the condensation of time in one point returning about every 65 minutes at 12 o’clock, ~1.05, ~2.10, ~3.15 and so on.
But this volatile condition of completeness lasts only for a second fanning immediately into three separate circles again.