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Michael Landy
Michael Landy
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Michael Landy CBE RA (born 1963) is one of the Young British Artists (YBAs). He is best known for the performance piece installation Break Down (2001), in which he destroyed all his possessions, and for the Art Bin project (2010) at the South London Gallery. On 29 May 2008, Landy was elected a member of the Royal Academy of Arts in London.

Key Information

Early life and works

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Landy was born in London, in May 1963. He first studied art in Loughton and Loughborough, then at Goldsmiths College in London, having been inspired to take up art professionally after having a picture selected for display on the BBC television art program Take Hart.[2]

After graduating from Goldsmiths in 1988, he exhibited in the Freeze exhibition, organised by Damien Hirst—an exhibition which first brought together a group of artists that would later become known as the Young British Artists.

In 1990, Landy exhibited in East Country Yard with several of the artists from Freeze. His first solo exhibition was Market (1990), an installation comprising numerous empty market stalls. Like much of his later work it was intended as a comment on consumerism and society.[citation needed]

In 1992, Landy started an association with Karsten Schubert by making Closing Down Sale for his gallery, an installation made up of a number of objects in shopping trolleys labelled "BARGAIN" and recorded announcements encouraging visitors to buy.[citation needed] The work was intended as a comment on the commodification of art, and might be seen as a precursor of sorts to Break Down, a work which produced no salable objects, except an edition of inventories (books) listing all destroyed items.

Before Break Down, Landy's best-known work was Scrapheap Services (1995–1996), which featured a fictitious cleaning company which sought to change society by way of "a minority of people being discarded". Promotional videos were made for the company and a large number of cut-out men were made from old magazines to be swept up and destroyed. This installation typifies the YBAs' interests in transforming the mundane into art, and recontextualisation. Its visual impact on one level is a typical industrial event, yet the gallery environment and bright red figures, along with the sinister irony of the title, is intended to force the viewer to address issues of humanity and consumerism.

Scrapheap Services, 1995.

In 1997, work which Landy had previously sold to Charles Saatchi was included in the Sensation exhibition at the Royal Academy in London.[3] This show later toured Berlin and New York, but Landy's work was somewhat overshadowed by some of the other more outrageous artworks.

Break Down

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Break Down, the work which put him in the public eye, was held in February 2001 at an old branch of the clothes store C&A on Oxford Street in London (C&A had recently ceased trading, and the shop had been emptied). Landy gathered together all his possessions, ranging from postage stamps to his car, and including all his clothes and works of art by himself and others, painstakingly catalogued all 7,227 of them in detail, and then destroyed all in public. The process of destruction was done on something resembling an assembly line in a mass production factory, with ten workers reducing each item to its basic materials and then shredding them.

The exhibition was a joint commission from The Times newspaper and Artangel, and attracted around 45,000 visitors. At the end of the process all that was left was bags of rubbish, none of which was sold or exhibited in any form. An edition of inventory books listing all destroyed items was available to buy when exiting through the gift shop.

Landy made no money as a direct result of Break Down, and following it had no possessions at all.

Later works

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Landy made little art in the year following Break Down before returning with a solo show in late 2002, entitled Nourishment. The exhibition consisted of a series of detailed etchings of weeds, rendered in the traditional style of botanical draughtsmanship. The intricate detailing is reported to have resulted in lasting eye damage for Landy.[citation needed]

In 2003, Landy was selected to chair the judging panel for the Beck's Futures art prize.

In 2008, Ridinghouse published Michael Landy: Everything Must Go!, Landy's first monograph, which brings together over 20 years of the artist's work for the first time.[4] It was in this year that Landy was elected a member of the Royal Academy.

Landy's Art Bin installation for the South London Gallery in February–March 2010 was described by the artist as "a monument to creative failure." A large transparent skip was installed at the gallery, into which he invited the public to throw art work with which they were dissatisfied.[5] Artists and collectors were invited to apply to dispose of works of art via a dedicated website.

In 2016, Museum Tinguely Basel curated Landy's first retrospective exhibition titled "Michael Landy. Out of Order". It spanned his entire career, bringing together works from Break Down, Credit Card Destroying Machine, and Saints Alive among many others.[6]

Personal life

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Landy's partner is fellow British artist Gillian Wearing.[7]

He was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2021 New Year Honours for services to art.[8]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Michael Landy (born 1963) is a British visual artist renowned for his large-scale installations, performance pieces, and drawings that critically examine themes of , , destruction, and socio-political issues in contemporary society. A key figure among the (YBAs), Landy rose to prominence through his participation in the seminal Freeze exhibition in 1988 while studying at Goldsmiths College, , where he earned his degree in 1988 after earlier studies at Loughton College of Art from 1979 to 1981 and of Art from 1981 to 1983. Landy's practice often involves meticulous cataloguing and mechanical processes to deconstruct everyday objects and systems, reflecting on the excesses of capitalism and personal value, influenced by his working-class background in Thatcher-era Britain. His breakthrough works include Market (1990), an installation of empty market stalls critiquing commerce; Scrapheap Services (1995), a fictional waste management company installation; and Break Down (2001), a two-week performance in a disused Oxford Street store where he inventoried and systematically destroyed all 7,227 of his personal possessions on a conveyor belt. Subsequent projects expanded this exploration, such as Nourishment (2002), a series of etchings depicting decaying plants; Saints Alive (2010–2013), kinetic sculptures of saints made from recycled materials during his residency at the National Gallery; and Art Bin (2010), a large shredder for visitors to destroy their unwanted artworks. In addition to his studio practice, Landy has undertaken public commissions like Acts of Kindness (2011–2012), a poster series celebrating altruism, and (2004), a life-size replica of his parents' house built from newsprint. More recent works include (2015–2017), immersive oil-stick drawings on newsprint addressing global crises, and Scaled Down (2018), sculptures compressing his earlier installations into compact forms. His art is held in major collections, including , MoMA, and the . Landy was elected a Royal Academician in 2008 and served as the Eranda Professor of Drawing at the Royal Academy Schools from 2014 to 2016; he was appointed Commander of the (CBE) in the for services to the arts. He continues to live and work in , with recent exhibitions including Out of Order at the Tinguely Museum in 2016 and LOOK at Hastings Contemporary in 2025.

Early life and education

Childhood influences

Michael Landy was born in in May 1963 to working-class parents of Irish Catholic heritage. His father, , immigrated from as a teenager and worked as a tunnel miner, enduring a traumatic industrial accident in 1977 when he was buried alive on the job, resulting in a fractured spine and long-term . This family experience of manual labor and its harsh consequences later informed Landy's exploration of themes related to work, loss, and material value in his . Growing up in , , Landy developed an early fascination with drawing, sparked by the children's television program , hosted by . At around age 15, in 1979, one of his scraperboard drawings—a depiction of a clown—was selected for display on the show's famous Gallery segment, an event that profoundly motivated his artistic aspirations and encouraged him to create sketches of everyday objects. His father later recalled Landy's persistent childhood habit of drawing, which reflected a budding interest in capturing the ordinary amid a modest family environment. During his teenage years, Landy began experimenting with art at school, laying the groundwork for his conceptual approach before pursuing formal training at College of Art from 1979 to 1981 and subsequently at Loughborough College of Art from 1981 to 1983.

Formal training

Michael Landy's formal artistic training built upon his childhood curiosity, ignited by the experience of having one of his drawings featured on the children's television programme , which encouraged his early interest in visual expression. He commenced his post-secondary education at Loughton College of Art from 1979 to 1981, followed by further foundational studies at Loughborough College of Art from 1981 to 1983. These early programs provided Landy with essential skills in , laying the groundwork for his conceptual approach. Landy then pursued a BA in at Goldsmiths College, , from 1985 to 1988, where the curriculum emphasized innovative and critical practices under influential tutors including Richard Wentworth. During this period at Goldsmiths, Landy's work developed toward themes of consumer culture and . In his final year at Goldsmiths, Landy participated in the landmark Freeze exhibition, organized by fellow student in an empty warehouse in 1988, where he presented early works, including pieces on car covers, that signaled his emergence within the movement. This involvement not only honed his skills in installation and but also connected his academic experiences to broader professional networks.

Early career and YBA involvement

Initial exhibitions

Michael Landy's emergence as an artist in the late 1980s was marked by his participation in the seminal Freeze exhibition, organized by and held in an empty London Port Authority building at Docks from August to September 1988. As a recent Goldsmiths College graduate, Landy contributed works such as (1988), consisting of plastic-sheeting installations draped over everyday objects, which began to explore themes of value, protection, and the of ordinary items in a consumer-driven society. His training at Goldsmiths provided the foundation for these experimental displays, emphasizing conceptual approaches to socio-economic critique. In 1990, Landy presented his first major solo exhibition, Market, at Building One in East London, transforming the vast space into an eerie assembly of empty market stalls constructed from generic metal frames, artificial turf, and stacked plastic bread crates. This installation symbolized the economic decline and desolation of urban markets during the early 1990s recession, evoking the hollow promises of consumerism amid Thatcher-era austerity. The work's stark, unoccupied stalls highlighted themes of waste and obsolescence, drawing attention to the fragility of commercial exchange. Landy's 1992 solo show Closing Down Sale at Karsten Schubert Gallery in further developed these motifs, parodying retail desperation by filling the space with shopping trolleys overflowing with junked consumer goods, day-glo sale signs, and looped audio announcements mimicking bargain hawkers. Installed during a period of economic downturn, the exhibition reflected the recession's impact on high streets and the alike, using the paraphernalia of liquidation sales to critique unchecked consumption and disposability. By the mid-1990s, Landy's international profile grew through his inclusion in the group exhibition Brilliant! New Art from at the Walker Art Center in from October 1995 to January 1996. There, he showcased Scrapheap Services (1995), an installation featuring a customized shredder processing waste materials into abstract forms, which underscored his ongoing interrogation of commerce and refuse while garnering broader recognition beyond the art scene. This participation solidified his reputation as a key figure in emerging British , bridging local economic critiques with global dialogues on materiality.

Key early installations

One of Michael Landy's pivotal early installations was Scrapheap Services (1995–1996), conceived as a fictitious company satirizing the disposability of human labor under , with the tagline promising to "rid the world of useless human beings." The work involved collecting vast amounts of urban litter over three years to create thousands of small, cut-out figures representing discarded people, displayed strewn across gallery floors alongside branded props like red uniforms, enamel signs, and a promotional video featuring a about eliminating "scum." A central interactive element was the "," an 11-foot-high with a 25-horsepower engine that processed the figures into scrap metal, inviting viewers to witness—and symbolically participate in—the mechanized destruction of , evoking bureaucratic efficiency and societal neglect. The installation toured internationally, debuting at the Walker Art Center's soap factory in in 1995, followed by the Electric Press Building in and Chisenhale Gallery in in 1996, where visitors navigated piles of the crumpled figures, underscoring complicity in consumer-driven . In 1997, Landy gained wider prominence through his inclusion in the Sensation: Young British Artists from the Saatchi Collection exhibition at London's , where he presented Costermonger's Stall (1992–1997), a full-scale mixed-media reconstruction of a traditional East End market barrow equipped with wooden structure, gloss paint, , plastic buckets, electric lights, and rows of real flowers. These installations marked Landy's shift toward performance-based art exploring and waste, with interactive processing of rubbish via shredders and spatial arrangements that blurred gallery boundaries and implicated audiences in themes of destruction and capitalist excess. Critically, Scrapheap Services was praised for its incisive commentary on Thatcher's labor market reforms and human devaluation, leading to its acquisition by the in 1997 as a key YBA statement on social radicalism; media outlets, including , highlighted such works as emblematic of the movement's provocative edge against establishment norms.

Major conceptual works

Break Down

Michael Landy's Break Down (2001) originated as a response to the pressures of consumerist society and his own burgeoning success as an artist, conceived in collaboration with Artangel following the sale of one of his works to in the late . Amid a sense of personal dislocation, Landy sought to disrupt his material accumulation by systematically destroying all his possessions, drawing on earlier explorations of disposal in works like Scrapheap Services (1995), where discarded items were mulched into waste. This ambitious project evolved over three years into a public performance that interrogated the ties between identity and ownership. The installation was executed from 10 to 24 February 2001 in a disused department store on London's , where Landy catalogued 7,227 personal items—including art supplies, family heirlooms like his father's sheepskin coat, clothing, letters, and even a car—over the preceding year. A team of 12 operatives, clad in blue boiler suits, processed the possessions along a 160-metre figure-of-eight system mimicking an industrial reclamation facility, sorting them into 10 material categories such as artworks, clothing, vehicle parts, electricals, and rubbish. Items too large for shredding were dismantled manually, while others passed through balers, crushers, and an , ultimately producing nearly 6 tons of granulated that was recycled or sent to landfill, leaving Landy with nothing but the suit he wore during the event. Break Down attracted thousands of visitors who witnessed the methodical destruction, often experiencing a mix of unease and as personal artifacts were obliterated, fostering public engagement with themes of loss, , and self-erasure. The work was documented in the film Breaking Down (directed by David Hinton) and a published inventory book, amplifying its reach and provoking widespread debates on consumerism's role in shaping identity in early 21st-century Western society. As Landy's most iconic project, it underscored his commitment to that confronts the disposability of modern life.

Art Bin

In 2010, Michael Landy created Art Bin, an interactive installation commissioned by the South London Gallery as a major new work following his earlier project Break Down. The installation transformed the gallery's main space into a monumental disposal site for unwanted artworks, featuring a massive transparent bin measuring approximately 5 metres high, 6 metres wide, and 15 metres long, constructed from galvanized steel and . Presented from 29 to 14 March 2010 at the gallery on Peckham Road in , Art Bin invited artists, collectors, and the public to contribute pieces they deemed failures or no longer valued, emphasizing themes of disposal and renewal. The installation was subsequently presented at the 2014 Yokohama Triennale. The mechanism of Art Bin centered on , with contributors climbing a to deposit their artworks into the bin, where they accumulated in a chaotic pile visible to all visitors, underscoring the equalization of artistic value regardless of origin or market worth. A mechanical shredder positioned nearby was used to destroy paper figures as a performative demonstration of the destruction theme. This setup served as a pointed of the art market's , questioning notions of worth, , and institutional validation by treating high-profile and amateur works alike. As a conceptual successor to Landy's personal Break Down—in which he catalogued and destroyed all his possessions in 2001—Art Bin extended that impulse outward, democratizing the act of artistic destruction; the bin's contents were transported to a after the closed. Over the course of the exhibition, more than 1,000 artworks were deposited, ranging from sketches and prints by emerging artists to pieces by established figures, including two skull paintings by and a work by . The diverse contributions highlighted the installation's broad appeal, with participants relinquishing items of personal or commercial significance, culminating in the bin's contents being transported to a after the show closed. This mass disposal amplified Landy's exploration of failure as a creative force, turning the gallery into a temporary archive of discarded ambition. Art Bin generated significant controversy, particularly over the irreversible destruction of potentially valuable items, sparking debates about the of art in a market-driven context. Media coverage, including reports from the and , framed the project as a provocative act of cultural , while emphasizing its role in fostering democratic engagement by empowering ordinary people to redefine artistic value. Critics and supporters alike praised its ability to provoke reflection on , with Landy describing it as "a to creative failure" that challenged the reverence typically afforded to art objects. The installation's success in drawing crowds and contributions underscored its impact on public discourse around art's and .

Later projects and residencies

In 2010, Michael Landy began a two-year residency as the Rootstein Hopkins Associate Artist at the in , where he immersed himself in the collection's early paintings, particularly focusing on depictions of martyred saints by artists such as and . This period allowed Landy to explore the dramatic narratives of saints' lives, drawing parallels to his ongoing interest in themes of destruction and self-annihilation seen in earlier works like Break Down. His research centered on the physical torments endured by these figures, transforming static painted imagery into dynamic, contemporary interpretations. The residency culminated in the 2013 exhibition Saints Alive, held from 23 May to 24 November in the Sunley Room, featuring six life-size kinetic sculptures that brought the saints to mechanical life. These works, constructed from scavenged materials including fiberglass body parts, metal cogs, wheels, fan belts, and motors sourced from junkyards, car boot sales, and flea markets, depicted saints such as Francis tormented by swarms of demons, striking his chest with a stone, and Apollonia extracting her own teeth with . Visitors activated the sculptures via foot pedals, prompting exaggerated, repetitive motions that evoked the saints' martyrdoms—such as or demonic assaults—blending violence with absurd humor. The exhibition also included preparatory drawings and collages of dismembered saintly attributes, as well as an interactive torture device resembling a rack, where audiences could manually turn wheels to simulate historical instruments of . Through these elements, Landy highlighted themes of endurance, self-destruction, and the comical futility of suffering, reanimating sacred narratives in a profane, machine-driven idiom. Following its London run, Saints Alive toured internationally, arriving at the Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso in from November 2014 to March 2015, where Landy adapted the installation to resonate with local traditions of saint veneration, such as rituals and devotion to figures like the Virgin of Guadalupe. The exhibition retained the kinetic sculptures and interactive components but incorporated contextual elements to bridge European martyrdom with Mexican cultural practices of honoring saints through and processions. This adaptation emphasized universal aspects of and , drawing significant audiences and extending the project's of destruction as a form of .

Recent installations and retrospectives

In 2016, Michael Landy presented his first major retrospective outside the , Out of Order, at Museum Tinguely in , , spanning works from the to the present and featuring approximately 30 pieces that highlighted his interest in destruction and mechanization. The exhibition included interactive installations such as the Credit Card Destroying Machine (2010), a kinetic device that pulverized plastic cards to critique , and Breaking News (2015), a shredder installation that processed daily print media into abstract, fragmented forms symbolizing the ephemerality of information. This survey underscored Landy's evolution from participatory performances to machine-driven explorations of waste and obsolescence, building on the mechanical innovations seen in his earlier Saints Alive series (2010–2013). The installation extended into dedicated exhibitions in 2017, first at the Diplarios School in through a commission by , where Landy invited public submissions of protest images that he transformed into stark blue-and-white oil-stick drawings reflecting Greece's socio-political unrest. Later that year, the work premiered in the United States at Sperone Westwater in New York, adapting the shredder mechanism to process newsprint into layered, abstract compositions that blurred the lines between current events and artistic abstraction. These presentations emphasized Landy's collaborative approach, turning collective narratives into visual detritus to comment on media overload and public dissent. In 2018, Landy explored themes of compression and reduction in Scaled-Down at Thomas Dane Gallery in , creating a series of small-scale sculptures and drawings that mimicked industrial waste compactors, transforming everyday objects into dense, flattened forms to interrogate the environmental impact of . The works, made from materials like felt pen, ink, and , evoked the mechanical processes of his prior installations while shifting focus to intimate, handheld scales that highlighted the personal residue of excess. Marking two decades since his seminal 2001 performance, Landy organized anniversary exhibitions for Break Down in 2021, including displays at Thomas Dane Gallery in and Firstsite in , , where archival materials, documentation, and reconstructed elements revisited the artist's systematic destruction of over 7,000 possessions on . These retrospectives reframed the work as a enduring critique of , incorporating new drawings and videos that reflected on its lasting cultural resonance. From 2022 to 2024, Landy continued developing site-specific drawings and sculptures, such as Future Ruins (2022–2024), a series reimagining architectural landmarks like the Bank of England as hollowed-out facades, commissioned for institutional contexts and emphasizing decay in urban heritage. In 2024, he unveiled San Gennaro, a kinetic sculpture at Thomas Dane Gallery depicting the martyred patron saint of Naples in a decapitated form, with concealed mechanisms releasing vials of simulated blood to evoke relic worship and spectacle. The year 2025 saw multiple unveilings, including Self Portrait at the Age of 62, a large-scale exhibited at Contemporary as part of LOOK. At Contemporary, the exhibition LOOK (27 September 2025–15 March 2026) presented a suite of personal drawings and etchings exploring Landy's experience with and his father's manual labor as a tunnel miner, using meticulous lines to convey vulnerability and resilience. Concurrently, Art Lovers, a joint show with at Thomas Dane Gallery in (4 February–12 April 2025), featured collaborative responses to the city's history, including Landy's saint sculptures alongside Wearing's portraits, highlighting mutual influences on themes of and .

Personal life and recognition

Relationships and collaborations

Michael Landy has maintained a long-term partnership with fellow Young British Artist since the late 1980s, when they met as students at . The couple, both born in 1963, married and have collaborated creatively over the decades, with their relationship influencing each other's exploration of themes like identity and . They share a home and studio in , where domestic elements often appear as motifs in Landy's works, reflecting their intertwined personal and artistic lives. Their most prominent collaboration to date is the 2025 exhibition Art Lovers at Thomas Dane Gallery in , , marking their first joint show in over 20 years. The exhibition pairs works from their personal collections, including portraits and new pieces responding to Naples' history, highlighting mutual influences such as Wearing's performative photography and Landy's conceptual drawings. This project underscores how their partnership fosters a dialogue on , collection, and artistic exchange, with Landy noting the rarity of such direct joint endeavors despite their shared professional circles. Landy and Wearing have provided mutual support through personal challenges, including Landy's 2004 diagnosis of . Following , Landy created a series of detailed drawings documenting his , which informed later works exploring vulnerability and the body. In 2025, Landy exhibited LOOK at Contemporary, showcasing these drawings alongside works related to his father's , reflecting on health and family resilience. Their continues to shape Landy's work amid ongoing life in .

Awards and honors

In 2008, Michael Landy was elected a Royal Academician (RA) by the Royal Academy of Arts in , recognizing his contributions to contemporary British . From 2010 to 2012, Landy served as Associate Artist at the , , a prestigious residency that explored themes of and , leading to the 2013 exhibition Saints Alive. In 2016, the Museum Tinguely in mounted Out of Order, Landy's first retrospective outside the , surveying three decades of his work and marking a significant milestone as a leading Young British Artist. Landy received the Commander of the (CBE) in the for services to the . He held the position of Eranda Professor of Drawing at the Royal Academy Schools from 2014 to 2016, influencing emerging artists through his expertise in conceptual drawing and installation. Landy's boundary-pushing installations, centered on and ephemerality, have shaped contemporary , inspiring artists to interrogate and societal waste.

References

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