Jump to content

St Michael and St George, White City

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

St Michael and St George, White City
Parish Church of St Michael and St George, White City
St Michael and St George, White City as seen in Spring 2021
St Michael and St George, White City is located in Greater London
St Michael and St George, White City
St Michael and St George, White City
51°30′45″N 0°13′50″W / 51.512445°N 0.230576°W / 51.512445; -0.230576
Location1 Commonwealth Ave, Shepherd's Bush, London, W12 7QR
CountryUnited Kingdom
DenominationChurch of England
TraditionAnglican
WebsiteSt Michael and St George, White City
History
Founded1954
Dedicated1953
Architecture
Architect(s)John Seely and Paul Paget
StyleModernist
Years built1952-53
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseDiocese of London
Episcopal areaKensington
ArchdeaconryMiddlesex
DeaneryHammersmith and Fulham
ParishWhite City
Clergy
Bishop(s)Bishop of Kensington
Vicar(s)interregnum
Curate(s)Revd Andy Rooney

The church of St Michael and St George, White City, is the parish church of the White City estate in the W12 (Shepherd's Bush) district of west London.[1] The church and parish serves the White City public-housing estate that was begun in the 1930s and completed after the Second World War. The parish boundary also encompasses new developments to the north of the former BBC Television Centre on the site of the former White City Stadium.

Design and opening

[edit]

The building was designed by the British architectural partnership of John Seely and Paul Paget and opened in 1954. It is described by Bridget Cherry and Nikolaus Pevsner in The Buildings of England London 3 North West, as:

"St Michael and St George, Commonwealth Avenue. 1952-3 by Seely & Paget, a humble, quietly modern L-shaped group of church and church hall, with shallow curved roofs. Exterior tympanum with naive painting. - (Wall paintimg above the altar by Brian Thomas)."[2]

Art

[edit]

The large wall painting by Brian Thomas above the high altar depicts the parish's two patron saints with grazing sheep. As of 2019, it is no longer on display, obscured by a dossal curtain.

The painting in the tympanum is the result of a community arts project that was led by the artist Peter Pelz[3] (c.1990).

The large painted murals on the walls on either side of the sanctuary are the result of a 1985 community arts project led by the artist Debbie de Beer. A plaque on the north side of the sanctuary reads as follows:

"This mural was painted in 1985 by local people under the direction of Debbie De Beer. It shows scenes from 'The Way of the Cross', an ecumenical Easter play in the streets of Shepherds Bush in 1984."

Proposal to demolish

[edit]

In November 2018 the Bishop of London made a formal proposal to demolish the current buildings and redevelop the site, "to include a new place of worship, improved community space and housing for Church ministry".[4] These plans are currently in abeyance.

[edit]

Further image sources

[edit]

Royal Institute of British Architects Library: Photographs of the building (1953- ) by British Aluminium Co. and Bedford Lemere & Co.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ ‘St Michael and St George, White City’. A church near you: the Church of England. Web resource, accessed 8 April 2019
  2. ^ The Buildings of England. London 3: North West by Bridget Cherry and Nikolaus Pevsner (Yale University Press, 1991), 204.
  3. ^ 'Peter Pelz', Dialogue Society. Web resource, accessed 7 April 2019
  4. ^ Mission and Pastoral Measure 2011 Diocese of London. Parishes of St Stephen with St Thomas, Shepherd's Bush; St Luke, Hammersmith; and St Catherine, North Hammersmith. 28 November 2018, online resource, accessed 28 March 2019.
  5. ^ Royal Institute of British Architects Library, shelf-mark P010588. Dual purpose church and church hall of St. Michael & St. George, White City, London, designed (1952-1953) by Seely & Paget. [Photographed by] British Aluminium Co. and Bedford Lemere & Co. - 20 photoprints: black and white; 4 photonegative.