High-pressure amorphization of anorthite has been observed by energy-dispersive X-ray diffraction of powdered samples held under static pressure in a diamond anvil cell. The onset of amorphization is accompanied by a significant reduction in the intensity of Bragg reflections at pressures between 10 and 14 GPa, and anorthite becomes completely X-ray amorphous between 14 and 20 GPa. These pressures are significantly lower than those suggested by earlier birefringence studies. The discrepancy can be reconciled in terms of a model of high-pressure amorphization in which partially amorphized anorthite can be regarded as a spatially heterogeneous anti-glass, with long-range order maintained but translational disorder dominating at shorter correlation lengths.