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John Pawson Bowl — Medium

c. 2005

by John Pawson

John pawson medium bowl 2 File

John Pawson’s Stoneware Medium Bowl is the perfect vessel for serving sides that complete any meal. With a 6.9‑inch diam­e­ter, it’s ideally sized for fresh seasonal vegeta­bles, grain salads, or any shared dish. The creamy off-white porce­lain finish provides a simple yet sophis­ti­cated back­drop, letting the colors and textures of its contents shine.

Orig­i­nally designed for the refec­tory of the Abbey of Our Lady in the Czech Repub­lic, this bowl embod­ies Pawson’s mini­mal­ist philos­o­phy of lyri­cism in restraint.” Its clean, under­stated design is both func­tional and elegant, making it equally suited for casual dining or special occa­sions. Now avail­able for modern homes, the Stoneware Medium Bowl brings time­less simplic­ity and quiet refine­ment to any table. Sold individually.

John Pawson

United Kingdom

For more than forty years, architect and designer John Pawson has pursued an minimal approach to form, paring buildings and objects back to proportion, material, and light.

Born in Halifax in 1949, Pawson was educated at Eton and later studied at the Architectural Association in London. A formative period in Japan, where he encountered the work of Shiro Kuramata, introduced him to a discipline of restraint that continues to shape his practice. Since establishing his London studio in 1981, he has designed houses, hotels, galleries, monasteries, and public buildings—all marked by a clarity of line and a sensitivity to space.

In 2013, Pawson extended this philosophy from architecture to the table. His stoneware collection translates architectural thinking into functional form. The Goblet, with its considered volume, and the Platedish, with its pared-back geometry, exemplify his belief that even the most everyday vessel deserves rigor of design. Each piece embodies permanence through material and proportion, demonstrating that restraint can yield richness.

Pawson’s work has been widely exhibited, and he has published extensively, including several monographs with Phaidon. In 2019, he was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for services to design and architecture.

Whether in a monastery cloister or a stoneware dish, Pawson’s work remains a meditation on essentials—design reduced not to absence, but to what endures.

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