John Pawson was brought up in Yorkshire, the son of a mill-owner, and was sent to school at
Eton, where he insisted on sleeping in a white canvas hammock. It was an early sign of his interest
in the ascetic. After seven years in the family textile business, he travelled to Japan and then
studied briefly at the Architectural Association before setting up his own design practice in
London. He is celebrated as a Minimalist but, as Deyan Sudjic points out in one of the essays
in Themes and Projects, the latest book on Pawson's work, it ‘has a robustness
that allows it to transcend the trivialization of the label’. His buildings have a considerable
physical and sensory presence, an abundance of experiential things. In another essay, one of the
neighbours of Pawson's London house, Katherine Bucknall, describes the effect as ‘maximal,
supercharged, eerie, occasionally mystical’. And it is easy to empathize with her observation
that even a pink rubber glove lying on the kitchen floor takes on a surreal quality, ‘like a
piece of contemporary art … a human clue in a plain, geometric ground’. These sorts
of realities are not easily reducible to words or images and so, when I met John Pawson in his
London office (and after he'd helped me fix my tape-recorder), that's where we began.