The great east window

The window, in the chancel, is one of the consolations for the fire that gutted St Anne’s on Good Friday 1850. The blaze destroyed an enamelled glass depiction of the Sermon on the Mount, created forty years earlier by Joseph Backler from a design by the artist Benjamin West, President of the Royal Academy.

Philip Hardwick, architect for the meticulous reconstruction of Hawksmoor’s church, recognized the need to replace the lost window with a comparable large-scale composition. He turned to one of the leading stained glass artists of the day. Charles Clutterbuck’s workshop was in nearby Stratford, but his stained glass was being commissioned by churches all over the country, particularly East Anglia and the Welsh counties of Gwent and Clwydd.

Resisting the vogue for mediaeval-style mosaic glass, Clutterbuck pursued the eighteenth century craft of enamel painting, applying ground glass to large panes with a brush and then baking them to a hard translucent finish in a specially sized oven. He started work on the Limehouse window soon after the fire. The Crucifixion is characteristic of Clutterbuck’s style: biblical, dramatic, large-scale, with a high horizon and a frame full of action and detail.

Before restoration the window was in a very bad way. Clutterbuck tended to apply the enamel too liberally, causing it to peel and crack. After a century and a half, much of his painted detail had been lost. The bomb blasts of two world wars had distorted all the panels. Many of the individual quarries had been fractured by structural or thermal movement.

Now the window has been fully restored by The Barley Studio in Yorkshire. We celebrated its return in 2025!