Swiss Watchmaker Longines salutes elegance and
style
Not least by reason of the
traditions and keen appreciation for elegance they
share, Longines has partnered gymnastics for over
one century now. Instituted in 1997 jointly with
the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) and
the European Gymnastics Federation (FEG), the Longines
Prize for Elegance is today regularly awarded at
the close of major gymnastics meets. The prize honors
the athlete or team judged to be the most elegant
performer during a world or continent-wide artistic
or rhythmic gymnastics competition, and features
a trophy specially designed by Swiss artist Piero
Travaglini, a Longines wristwatch as well as a check
worth US$5,000.
Established in 1832, Longines has from the first emphasized elegance,
not least during its more than a century’s involvement in
the world of sport, building its reputation for precision, reliability
and technological expertise by monitoring sport performances, evaluating
contestants’ performance and rating their stylistic proficiency.
Official timekeeper at numerous Winter and Summer Olympic Games
as well as of many international and continent-wide sport competitions,
Longines has today decided to focus on sport disciplines where
elegance is of particular significance: gymnastics and show jumping.
Since 1989, Longines has been the official partner and timekeeper
of the International Gymnastics Federation. The company has earned
its place and position by virtue of the know-how and practical
experience it brings to bear on its appointed responsibilities.
In fact, Longines’ involvement with the world of sport goes
back to 1880 when it first made its chronographs available to the
organizers of gymnastics meetings of every description. In 1912,
Longines officially timed the Swiss Federal Gymnastics Festival
in Basle. This event provided the venue for a pivotal world first
in sports timekeeping: the introduction of the first automatic
timing system based on the principle of the finish-line tape, snapped
by the winner of the 100-meter race.
From the Olympic Games to world, international, continental and
national championships, the company has unceasingly played a leading
role in gymnastics. Most timing advances and innovations in this
area have stemmed from Longines’ capacity to invent and adapt,
improve and adjust, not to mention its constant technological inventiveness.
The company has focused on gymnastics as an emblematic sport from
its perspective not least because it expresses to perfection Longines’ own “Elegance
is an attitude” message. Practiced on all continents, gymnastics
meshes smoothly with Longines’ international corporate image.
Combining physical strength and endurance with precision and grace,
the sport is in tune with the innovative spirit of its skilled
watchmakers. Its stylish refinement, its very beauty too, make
it the perfect showcase for the message of poise and elegance that
Longines watches invariably convey.
The
award criteria
With a view to giving concrete substance to its catchline “Elegance
is an attitude” and in its capacity as official partner and
timer of all world gymnastics events staged under the patronage
of the FIG, Longines of Switzerland has since 1997 regularly awarded
its Longines Prize for Elegance. It rewards the team or athlete
whose performance has been judged the most elegant during a world
or continent-wide artistic or rhythmic gymnastics competition.
They are selected less on the basis of their technical merits than
for their natural gracefulness, inbred elegance and warmth of personality.
In other words, the Longines Prize for Elegance rewards the human
aspects of sport.
The
Jury
A jury composed of distinguished personalities from public life,
the economy, gymnastics sport or show business and representatives
of Longines follows the entire competition process and selects
the winner of the Longines Prize for Elegance on the basis of predetermined
criteria. At the close of the competition, the athlete so honored
is presented with the sculptured Longines Prize for Elegance trophy
designed by Swiss artist Piero Travaglini.
Prize
money and awards
The athlete or team judged to be the most elegant performer during
a world or continent-wide artistic or rhythmic gymnastics competition
will be awarded with a trophy specially sculptured by Swiss artist
Piero Travaglini, a Longines wristwatch as well as a check worth
US$5,000.
Prize
history
Since its inception in 1997, Longines has awarded its Longines
Prize for Elegance on a number of occasions:
.1st prize (1997) Natalia Lipkovskaya
(Russia), at the 21st World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships
in Berlin .2nd prize (1998) Svetlana
Khorkina (Russia), at the 22nd European
Artistic Gymnastics Championships, in St.
Petersburg (Russia) .3rd prize (1998) Spanish
women’s gymnastics team, at the 22nd
World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships
in Sevilla (Spain) .4th prize (1999) Viktoria Fráter (Hungary),
at the 15th European Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships in Budapest
(Hungary) .5th prize (1999) Elena Vitrichenko (Ukraine),
at the 23rd World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships in Osaka
(Japan) .6th prize (1999) Svetlana Khorkina (Russia)
and Lu Yufu (China), at the 34th World Artistic Gymnastics
Championships in Tianjin (China) .7th prize (2000) Esther Dominguez (Spain),
at the 16th European Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships in Zaragoza
(Spain) .8th prize (2001) Irina Tchachina (Russia),
at the 24th World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships in Madrid
(Spain) .9th prize (2002) Italian women’s gymnastics
team, at the 25th World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships in
New Orleans (USA) .10th prize (2002) Cho Eun-Jung (Korea), at
the 14th Asian Games in Busan (Korea) .11th prize (2002) Qin Xiao (China) and Elena
Zamolodchikova (Russia), at the 36th World Artistic Gymnastics
Championships in Debrecen (Hungary) .12th prize (2003) Carly Patterson (USA) and
Wei Yang (China), at the 37th World Artistic Gymnastics Championships
in Anaheim, California (USA) .13th prize (2003) Almudena Cid (Spain), at
the 26th World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships in Budapest
(Hungary) .14th prize (2005) Irina Tchachina (Russia),
at the 27th World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships in Baku
(Azerbaijan).
Longines is a member of Swatch Group Ltd, the world’s leading
watch manufacturer and marketer, with no fewer than 158 production
sites in Switzerland.