This year’s Friends of St Michael’s Annual Lecture is on Saturday 14 October at 3pm in the church, St Michael and All Angels. £12 on the door (free to Friends). Continue reading Making Gothic Revival Waves
Tag Archives: Pre-Raphaelites
Which Pre-Raphaelite?
Which Pre-Raphaelite artist are you?

Ground-breaking, thought-provoking and hopeless romantics – the Pre-Raphaelites gave us ethereal paintings, beautiful textiles and poetry. Take ArtFund’s two minute personality quiz to find out which radical Victorian artist you’d be. A romantic poet with a love of wombats and red heads or a passionate socialist with a penchant for interior design and medieval literature.
www.artfund.org/news/2014/12/10/which-pre-raphaelite-artist-are-you
Thanks to The Flyer, the newsletter of the Friends of St Michael’s
Celebrate the Pre-Raphaelites at St Michael’s
This autumn sees a major celebration of the Pre-Raphaelites. ‘Pre-Raphaelites: Victorian Avant-Garde’ (12 September 2012 – 13 January 2013) at Tate Britain will be a major reassessment of these artists, and the redeveloped William Morris Gallery in Walthamstow has just opened. But many people are not aware that some of the finest Pre-Raphaelite works are on our doorstep – in St. Michael’s Church, Victoria Road. In 1909, the stained glass artist Selwyn Image wrote: “Brighton possesses the finest modern piece of stained glass that has ever been done…for the magnificence of its design, the sense… of being in the presence of supernatural beings, the perfectness of its splendid colouring…this specimen seemed to be perfection”.
Continue reading Celebrate the Pre-Raphaelites at St Michael’s
Friends of St Michael’s
The Friends of Saint Michael’s are continuing their fund-raising efforts with a grand dinner in the church on June 24 2011. Last year 100 people enjoyed food, music and good company in the magnificent setting of the church in Victoria Road.
If you’d like to join them, find out more, contact the Parish office on 822284 or email
parishoffice@saintmichaelsbrighton.org
All proceeds go towards the conservation of the Pre-Raphaelite works in the church.