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John Pawson
Architecture View
Paul Goldberger
 
The New York Times
27 October 1996
 
...[John Pawson] possesses a razorsharp, unsentimental attitude toward design; with its almost monastic austerity, the Calvin Klein store is about as far from warm and cuddly as you can get. But it is a truly impressive piece of work, self-assured and rigorous, and it creates a stunning setting for Mr Klein's products.
 
The stone floors, the walls coated with flat white paint and the floating, cantilevered glass shelving leave all richness and texture to the clothing, heightening its visual impact. Spectacular windows, 34 feet high and set within the classical façade, create an exquisite counterpoint between old and new on the streetscape and connect the life within the store to the life of the street. Thus, the unusual environment within becomes a place that engages with the city instead of withdrawing.
 
The spaces are somewhat static - the narrow, closed-in stairs don't help - but at least Mr Pawson understands the essence of minimalism, which is not just a matter of eliminating things but of distilling what remains into something as close to perfect as possible.
 
It brings to mind Strunk and White's 'Elements of Style', which counsels that the essence of good writing is not brevity but 'that every word tell'.
 
With Mr Pawson, every architectural word tells. The silences, the spaces in between - the space that is not filled up with something - are the silences that tell as much as the words, and sometimes more. I will not exaggerate the importance of this store and tell you that you feel cleansed by a walk through it. However, you do feel that you are in the presence of design that demonstrates with consummate intelligence the virtues of simplicity, and that communicates a sense of belief.