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Edward Burne-Jones’s God: Pre-Raphaelite Revolutionaries and the Beauty of Holiness
Thu 28 September – 19:30 – 21:00
Join us for our third annual Gore Lecture on public theology – in the cathedral and online.
In the mid-nineteenth century, British art changed forever. A young group of artists, who called themselves the Pre-Raphaelites, began to explore aspects of everyday life, love and death alongside monumental themes from the Bible, literature, and cultural history.
In stained glass, paint, ink, and stone, these artists created a new way of seeing the world and its creativity through the arts. This lecture will situate the Victorian painter Edward Burne-Jones within his Pre-Raphaelite context, particularly focusing on the ways in which Burne-Jones depicted Christ and biblical themes. His approach to hope, faith and love was unique, and this is particularly clear in the work he produced for churches and cathedrals, including Birmingham’s glorious stained glass windows.
In Burne-Jones’s attention to colour, composition, and detail, he told well-known stories in fresh ways, as an artist whose work was highly theological. In his imagination, courageous knights are transformed by visions of Christ, Mary Magdalene’s encounter with Jesus is an immersive experience of love in action, Joseph looks in awe upon the Magi bringing their gifts, and angels hold God’s glorious creation in the palms of their hands. By considering Burne-Jones’s work in relation to his Pre-Raphaelite contemporaries and from a theological point of view, new perspectives emerge regarding sacred art, and art’s capacity to change the world for the better.
About Ayla Lepine
Ayla has been Associate Rector at St James’s Piccadilly, since July 2022, before which she was Ahmanson Fellow in Art and Religion at the National Gallery. Originally from Canada, she moved to the UK in 2003 to study theology and art history. Following her PhD in Victorian sacred architecture at the Courtauld Institute of Art, she held fellowships at Yale’s Institute of Sacred Music and the Courtauld, and was lecturer and fellow at the University of Essex. She was ordained in 2018 and served her title at Hampstead Parish Church.
Ayla’s approach to ministry focuses deeply on belonging, beauty, and social justice. Her publications have appeared in British Art Studies and Tate’s ‘In Focus’ series, as well as books including Modern Architecture and Religious Communities. She is a trustee of the UK charity Art and Christianity, a Visiting Scholar at Sarum College, and a member of the St Paul’s Cathedral Visual Arts Committee.

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