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JP Flat­ware

by John Pawson

John pawson flatware 2

John Pawson’s Flat­ware Set is a master­class in propor­tion: each angle is consid­ered, each handle sized to balance the utility at its termi­nus, whether it be teaspoon, dinner spoon, or three- or four-pronged fork. In a charm­ing twist, the knife stands upright, ready for use. Each is made in Belgium of 18/10 stain­less steel. Initially conceived for the refec­tory of the Abbey of Our Lady of Novy Dvur in Bohemia, the set is at last avail­able for bohemian tables of all faiths and stripes.

John Pawson

United Kingdom

Few designers have done more with less than John Pawson. A simple expanse of stone, a careful application of glazing—Pawson has spent almost four decades utilizing the tenets of minimalism to create thoughtful spaces to think. Born in Halifax in 1949, Pawson studied both at Eton and at his family’s textile mill before a teaching trip to Japan introduced him to that country’s architectural and aesthetic traditions. After returning to London to study at the Architectural Association, he formed his own practice in 1981. Since then, he’s merged the spiritual and the substantive, devising innovative architectural solutions to the problems of scale and light.

While Pawson has applied his clear-eyed gaze to the theatrical, crafting ballet sets for the L’Opéra Bastille in Paris and London’s Royal Opera House, he’s most at home in residential projects, whether for the jet-set clientele at Ian Schrager’s projects from Hollywood to Miami Beach or Cistercian Monks at the Abbey of Our Lady of Nový Dvůr in Bohemia.

Since even the sparest space must be filled with functional objects, in 2013 Pawson designed the inaugural collection of tableware and home accessories for Beatrice de Lafontaine’s When Objects Work, a collaboration which continues to this day. And after publishing seven books with Phaidon, Pawson was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2019.

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