Richard Mille is an extreme automobile enthusiast. That is not a secret. In fact, you could almost say that Mille’s brand has been built around his love of automobiles and racing.
Therefore, it was a natural fit for the brand to partner with car event specialist Peter Auto in reviving an entertaining French tradition from the 1920s that had disappeared.
The result is the Chantilly Arts & Elégance, an event produced with all the panache you would expect from Richard Mille.

The Château de Chantilly creates a beautiful backdrop to the cars at the 2015 Arts & Elégance Chantilly (photo courtesy Cyrille George Jerusalmi / Getty Images)
On September 6, 2015, a sizable crowd of more than 13,000 gathered at the Château de Chantilly, just outside of Paris, to celebrate the second edition of the Chantilly Arts & Elégance.
This number represents a 35 percent increase in visitors over the 2014 edition – and it is a number that illustrates France’s fondness for this event.

Polo player Pablo Mac Donough wearing his namesake Richard Mille timepiece during the 2015 Arts & Elégance Chantilly (photo Cyrille George Jerusalmi / Getty Images)
The captivating weekend commenced with a polo tournament organized by Richard Mille ambassador Pablo Mac Donough at the Polo Club de Chantilly. The 10-goal Argentinian is one of the world’s best polo players (see Polo: The Sport Of Kings, And Thanks To Richard Mille, Yours Truly).
The automobiles
But the biggest draw of the event is the showing of some of the world’s finest automobiles, allowing visitors to rediscover the elegance of the cars of yesteryear with bodywork sculpted by some of the greatest names in automotive design.

This BMW 3.0 CSL Hommage R won the Concours d’Elégance at the 2015 Arts & Elégance Chantilly (photo Cyrille George Jerusalmi / Getty Images)
A panel of nearly 40 renowned experts judged three automobile competitions taking place during the Sunday: the Concours d’Elégance, the Concours d’Etat, and the Concours des Clubs.
The Richard Mille “Best of Show” prize went to Evert Louwman’s 1936 Mercedes 500 K Special Roadster, which was released on loan from the Louwman Museum for this event.
BRM P 115 H16 from 1967
But perhaps for us watch fans, the most interesting car of the event belonged to none other than Richard Mille himself.
Mille has a known penchant for 1960s and ‘70s Formula 1 cars. So it comes as little surprise that Mille had the chance of winning a prize at the event with one of his own.
He was, in fact, awarded the Alain Figaret prize for finest Formula 1 car: his BRM P 115 H16 lightweight chassis 01 from 1967, a unique model, attracted the most positive attention of the jury. Its 16-cylinder, H-formation, 3.0-liter engine is considered to be one of the most complex car engines ever created.

Richard Mille’s BRM P 115 H16 from 1967 won the Alain Figaret prize for finest Formula 1 car at the 2015 Arts & Elégance Chantilly (photo Yves Riom)
But perhaps even more interesting is its history. This car was built by British Racing Motors in 1967. It was entered into the last five Grand Prix races of 1967 and the first one of 1968. In those 1967 races, none other than Sir Jackie Stewart was the driver, while Mike Spence drove it in the 1968 race.
Though it finished none of the races it was entered into due to various engine and transmission failures, the car – whose monocoque chassis comprises a magnesium alloy – is a bona fide piece of racing history.
For a real feel for the weekend’s aesthetically pleasing events, watch this video by The Watches TV. And mark your calendar for the third edition of the Chantilly Arts & Elégance, which is set to take place on September 4, 2016.
Trackbacks & Pingbacks
[…] and sponsoring drivers and teams from F1, rally, Le Mans, and Formula E. And he helped launch the Chantilly Arts & Elegance, the first concours d’elegance held in France since the […]
[…] Mille the man is a massive automotive fan in every respect from racing and Formula 1 to road cars and vintage racers and he maintains a private collection of his own including one of Bruce McLaren’s legendary first Formula 1 cars, the M2B from 1966. See some of his collection’s cars in Richard Mille And Arts & Elégance Chantilly: Now This Is Stylish. […]
[…] cars in existence from all different eras of motoring history. These are events such as the Richard Mille Arts & Elégance in Chantilly, France and the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance (see Pebble Beach Classic Car Week 2014: The Enthusiast […]
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