Following a visit with his wife and children to the
Sistine Chapel in
Rome for the
beatification of the
English Martyrs in 1987, sign-painter Gary Bevans was inspired to paint a copy of the Sistine Chapel frescoes on the ceiling of English Martyrs' Church. The
frescoes painted by
Michelangelo on the
ceiling of the Sistine Chapel from 1508 are regarded as one of the major artistic accomplishments of human civilisation. Bevans realised that English Martyrs' Church is the same width as the Sistine Chapel in Rome, and slightly shorter in length. Having secured the backing of the parish priest he received permission from the bishop of Arundel and Brighton,
Cormac Murphy-O'Connor and began work later in 1987. Bevans completed the painting of the ceiling in 1993, five and a half years later. Bevans completed the works by himself, working in the evening and at weekends, in addition to his full-time job. The medium used for the painting is acrylic, on a white ground, applied to a vaulted wooden ceiling fixed to the church roof. The church also has a stained glass west window, by
Annie Goodman, installed in 1990, as well as Irish coloured glass in the
clerestory. ==Adjoining barn==