
Visionarium
The Visionarium is a curated gallery of imagery shaped by the spirit of Anglofuturism, a space where tradition meets imagination. Featuring original artwork, AI-generated visuals, and conceptual designs, it explores a future envisioned through the lens of classical values, quiet heroism,and the quiet dignity of tradition shares tea with the wild imaginings of tomorrow. All curated with a discerning eye and just the right amount of flash. Tally-ho, civilisation!
Television

Red Dwarf
created by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor, Grit, Grime, and Grace Aboard the Last Ship of the Empire If The Crown depicts the burden of tradition in palaces and parlours,…
The Prisoner (1967)
A surreal slice of seaside paranoia, “The Prisoner” is what happens when British exceptionalism takes a long walk and finds itself kidnapped by a Kafkaesque bureaucracy in…
Artwork

Lego
Anglofuturism: The Brick Frontier “Build Together” – because space isn’t going to organise itself. Here we present the Anglofuturist LEGO meme series, bright, blocky visions of a future both functional and…

Film Cover Memes
Welcome to the Anglofuturist Poster Gallery, a curated collection of reimagined film art, propaganda pastiche, and cultural homage. Here, the bold visual language of the silver screen is drafted into civilisational…
Books

Review of The Anti-Catastrophe League By Tom Ough
Let's begin by stating that Tom Ough’s The Anti-Catastrophe League is rather a triumph, the sort of book that one imagines being read in a comfortable armchair, with a roaring fire,…

Hyperion
Hyperion – Dan Simmons Chaucer with Plasma Rifles, Pilgrimage with Purpose, and the Empire of Man at a Crossroads If The Canterbury Tales were rewritten aboard a torchship headed for the…

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
by Douglas Adams The End of the World, with a Cup of Tea and a Very British Towel If Anglofuturism had a slightly eccentric uncle who drank Pan Galactic Gargle Blasters…
Collected Anglofuturism – Alexander d’Albini
One part philosophical sparkplug, one part cultural handbook, this gem doesn’t just define Anglofuturism, it embodies it. Whether waxing lyrical about stoic engineers or detailing the aesthetics of a gentleman’s orbital…
Theature
Jerusalem – Jez Butterworth
An Anglofuturist tale by accident rather than design, but by thunder does it strike the mark! Rooster Byron is a man out of time, equal parts bard, rebel, and prophet of Albion’s half-forgotten mythos. In a world of Tesco car parks and mobile mast dystopias, he’s shouting through the fog, demanding we remember the sacred. It’s about roots, resistance, and refusing to go quietly into the processed night.