Angie's Umbrella is a 30-foot (9.1 m) tall metal sculpture by Jim Pridgeon and Benson Shaw, installed in Seattle, Washington, United States.
Named after Pridgeon's grandmother, the 2003 artwork is made of stainless steel, powder coated aluminum, and cast urethane.
[2] Regina Hackett of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer described the artwork as "lean, clean and even elegant, with black trim and red mesh metal creating a moiré pattern".
[1] Inspired by Seattle's rainy weather, the red sculpture rotates 360 degrees, depending on which way the wind is blowing.
[1][2] The Seattle Post-Intelligencer's Regina Hackett said the artwork "puts a flashy punctuation point between the Market and Belltown" and complimented the artists, writing, "In other hands, an inside-out umbrella might have been corny or despicably cute.