Find out about exhibitions, activities, tours and talks at Birmingham Museums
Aston Hall, Blakesley Hall and Soho House provide a choice of spectacular and elegant locations for your dream wedding.
27th January 2012
2012 marks the bicentenary of Augustus Welby Pugin (1.3.1812 – 14.9.1852). A Pugin Trail, events and exhibitions will highlight his legacy in Birmingham.
Pugin was arguably the greatest British architect, designer and writer of the nineteenth century. Some of his finest work includes the interiors of the House of Lords, the Catholic church of St Giles, Cheadle, and his own house, The Grange, Ramsgate.
Pugin designed or contributed to six main sites in
The bicentenary of his birth provides the opportunity to highlight Pugin's legacy in
The Birmingham Pugin Trail
A specially designed trail, highlighting the connections of Pugin and Hardman with
St
1 March sees the formal opening of the city’s bicentenary celebrations at 7pm with a service and choral intermission, the launch of the Birmingham Pugin Trail and the opening of a Pugin exhibition in the crypt, followed by a reception.
Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery is home to a number of objects designed by Pugin, including Hardman (metalwork), Minton (tiles) and a table by J.G. Crace. One of the largest items, which will be on display in the industrial gallery by 1 March, is the Rood Screen from
Barber
A delightful print display and trail ‘Pugin, Dürer and The Gothic’ is now open, and runs until 24 June. Exhibits are from the Barber’s own collection and include a late medieval Brussels wood carving of Joachim and Anna, once owned by John Bernard Hardman; an early Netherlandish triptych of the Deposition, once owned by Pugin; a collection of eight prints and one drawing by Dürer, widely recognised as the greatest German Renaissance artist and a prime inspiration to Pugin, and a Pugin octagonal table on loan from King Edward’s School.
Lunchtime talks: 29 February (1.10pm); 1 March and 29 March (1.15pm).
Admission to the exhibition is Free. Further information: www.barber.org.uk
Museum of the Jewellery Quarter
In 1838, Pugin persuaded his friend, John Hardman (1811-1867), to turn his
The Museum of the Jewellery Quarter features a number Hardman pieces in its displays, and most of the techniques and processes demonstrated on the fascinating factory tour are exactly the same as used in the 19th Century by Hardman and similar metalworking firms.
For the Pugin Bicentenary the museum will be mounting a special exhibition on Hardman & Co, which opens on 22 March.
St Mary’s Convent, Handsworth
The House of Mercy by A.W.N.Pugin, a Gothic Revival gem in the heart of
See website: www.mercyhandsworth.org.uk
King Edward's School
King Edward’s School has photographed its Pugin collection, which can be accessed on the school website: http://kes.org.uk/gallery/Other/Pugin
For more information about Pugin and his bicentenary visit:
You can follow news from this museum through the RSS 2.0 feed.