April 8, 2026
Kohler’s Artist Editions Celebrates 40 Years of Bath Design

Once you start noticing Kohler, it’s hard to unsee: the sink in your bathroom, the toilet in your favorite café, the fixtures in the highest-end hotel you’ve ever slept in. Founded in 1873, the company has embedded itself into the rituals of daily life — often by rethinking what utility can look like, and pushing the boundaries of what it should.

Its first bathtub, famously, was a cast-iron horse trough. And in 1985, Kohler took another creative leap with the launch of Artist Editions — a program that brought art into modern bathroom trends in ways that felt groundbreaking then, and still do now.

The initiative, which turns 40 this year, has commissioned over 117 limited-edition designs from a diverse roster of artists, ranging from resident ceramicists at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center to celebrated multidisciplinary talents like Janet Echelman and Daniel Arsham (whose collaborative cabin I stayed in last summer, complete with his very own Artist Editions fixtures like the sculptural Rock.01 sink).

Kohler Co. artisian

Each artist brings their own narrative, medium, and methodology, resulting in avant-garde bath fixtures rarely seen in the broader market. Most are limited editions, though a select few have since earned their place as lasting icons.

(Image credit: Kohler Co.)

There’s no singular aesthetic across the archive — and that’s by design. Each artist brings their own visual vocabulary to the Kohler language, often employing techniques not typically associated with bathroom fixtures: glasswork, specialty glazes, intricate decals, glasswork, and beyond.

link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *