Ben Arogundade is a British-born author, publisher, voiceover artist and creative director of books. He originally trained as an architect before diversifying into printjournalism and graphic design. In the mid-1990s he launched his own style magazine, Extract. In 2000 he wrote his first book, Black Beauty, a work of non-fiction which explored Western culture's perceptions of the black image. In 2006 he became creative director at Gloria books — publishers of high end limited edition photography collectables. Today he runs his own book publishing imprint, White Labels Books, as well as 365 Positivity, an apps start-up.
After graduating in 1990 Arogundade worked as a junior architect on a range of commercial buildings, including the Oxo Tower on London's South Bank, adjacent to The Tate Modern. He left the profession during the recession of the mid-1990s, diversifying into journalism and graphic design, both of which he taught himself. In 1995 he wrote the business plan for a new kind of magazine which preceded the birth of reality TV in Britain. Launched in 1996, Extract was radical — a celebrity-free bi-monthly style magazine dedicated to interviews with life's unknown characters. The magazine's creative irreverence attracted the attention of advertising geniuses Thomas Carty and Walter Campbell from the Abbott Mead Vickers BBDO agency. The duo were creators of the famous Surfer campaign that won ad of the century. They produced a series of controversial ads for the fledgling magazine, which were banned in cinemas but later won two industry awards. The magazine ran for four issues before closing a year later. After this Arogundade began working as a freelance journalist. He has written for a number of publications, including The Times, The Observer, The Guardian, Marie Claire and The Evening Standard. It was while reporting backstage at a Parisfashion show that he had the idea for his first book, Black Beauty. It began as a magazine article about discrimination against black models, but then evolved into an analysis of the way the black image has fared historically within Western culture. The book was published in 2000, and was later adapted into a three-part BBC documentary. at the launch of his limited edition collectable at the Brazilian embassy, London 2006 Following this Arogundade diversified into fiction and screenplays, adapting a series of short stories for television, with actor Laurence Fishburne. He also signed on as a voiceover artist with Sue Terry Voices in London. His voice has featured on a range of documentaries, commercials and TV channel idents. In 2006 he was appointed creative director at start-up luxury publisher, Gloria books. The company was founded by Ovais Naqvi, co-editor of the Muhammad Ali super book, GOAT, published by Taschen in 2003. The new company specialised in super-sized, limited-edition photography books, aimed at high-end collectors globally. During his tenure Arogundade produced four groundbreaking limited-edition collectables — Pelé, Super-yacht, Scarfe on the Wall and New York. In 2016 he started his own publishing imprint, White Labels Books, producing print-on-demand, direct-to-consumer fiction and non-fiction. Obama: 101 Best Covers is its debut release. He also runs a tech start-up, 365 Positivity, which produces health and wellbeing apps.
Personal life
Arogundade is the father of Swedish singer, designer and creative ECCO2K born from a prior relationship with a Swedish makeup artist.