Season 11 Episode 130
For the British architect John Pawson, minimalism isn’t just a design philosophy, but a life philosophy—with his 1996 book, Minimum, serving as a defining jumping-off point. Over the course of more than four decades, Pawson has quietly amassed a global following by distilling spaces, objects, and things down to their most essential. With projects ranging from his career-defining Calvin Klein Collection flagship store on Madison Avenue in New York City, completed in 1995, to a remote monastery complex in the Czech Republic he’s been building for Cistercian monks of the Trappist order for more than 25 years; from hotels in Los Angeles, Madrid, and Tel Aviv to London’s Design Museum; from private homes in Colorado, Greece, Japan, Sweden, and beyond, to a chair and cookware; from lamps and linens to doorknobs, bowls, to even a steak knife, Pawson’s tightly focused yet seemingly boundless practice places him in a category all his own.
On the episode—our fourth “site-specific” taping of Time Sensitive, recorded at Pawson’s country home in the Cotswolds—he discusses the problems he sees with trying to turn minimalism into a movement; his deep-seated belief in restraint, both in life and in architecture; and his humble, highly refined approach to creating sacred spaces.
Special thanks to our Season 11 presenting sponsor, L’École, School of Jewelry Arts.
Show notes:
[08:06] Tetsuka House (2005)
[08:06] “John Pawson’s Approach to Making Life Simpler”
[08:06] Shiro Kuramata
[08:06] Katsura Imperial Villa
[08:06] North York Moors
[12:41] “Minimum” (1996)
[12:41] Sen no Rikyū
[17:35] Calvin Klein Collections Store (1995)
[17:35] Ian Schrager
[17:35] Paul Goldberger
[17:35] Cathay Pacific (1998)
[20:59] “Elements of Style” (1959) by William Strunk Jr. and E.B. White
[20:59] “Plain Space” (2010)
[20:59] Raymond Carver
[23:08] Bruce Chatwin
[23:08] “Wabi”
[23:08] Chatwin Apartment (1982)
[26:26] Deyan Sudjic
[28:12] Ryōan-ji
[31:11] “John Pawson: Making Life Simpler” (2023)
[30:16] Neuendorf House (1989)
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