Founder | Roger Took |
---|---|
Purpose | Arts organisation |
Headquarters | 31 Eyre Street Hill London EC1R 5EW |
Coordinates | 51°31′22″N 00°06′37″W / 51.52278°N 0.11028°W |
Directors | James Lingwood Michael Morris |
Website | www |
Artangel is a London-based arts organisation founded in 1985 by Roger Took.[1] Directed since 1991 by James Lingwood and Michael Morris, it has commissioned and produced a string of notable site-specific works, plus several projects for TV, film, radio and the web.[2] Notable past works include the Turner Prize-winning House by Rachel Whiteread (1993),[3] Break Down by Michael Landy (2001) and Seizure by Roger Hiorns (2008–2010), also nominated for the Turner Prize in 2009.[4]
A 2002 article in The Daily Telegraph described the organisation as creating "art that operates by ambush, rather than asking you to pay up before you see it",[5] while a 2007 profile in The Observer noted that "Artangel has worked with exceptional artists to produce some of the most resonant works of our time, in some very unusual places".[6] These have included a condemned council flat (Seizure, 2008–2010), a former postal sorting office (Küba, 2005), a vacated general plumbing store (An Area of Outstanding Unnatural Beauty, 2002) and the former Oxford Street branch of the C&A department store (Break Down, 2001).