activist journalist psychotherapist
Thereafter he studied arts, philosophy and history of theatre, as well as directing in Milan, Vienna and New York, while still publishing articles in Austrian and Italian journals.
He is the director of Lighthouse Wien. In 1973, he started to work as an opera critic of a provincial newspaper called Südost Tagespost. In the 1980s, Michelides was a collaborator for the newly founded magazine WIENER.
He then joined the ad agency GGK Wien and the marketing team of the Swiss watch Swatch in Biel.
At the same time, he organized a series of exhibitions in Vienna and published some catalogues. He presented five young American photographic artists (John Dugdale, Marcus Leatherdale, Robert Mapplethorpe, Todd Watts and Joel-Peter Witkin) for the first time in Europe.
In the early 1990s, he served as an investigative journalist for the magazine FORVM and other publications in Austria and Germany. Michelides disclosed the membership of Thomas Bernhard in a conservative party organization called the Bauernbund.
He also revealed that Rudolf Augstein had published in the Nazi paper Völkischer Beobachter.
Finally he exposed Gertrud Fussenegger, Austria"s then most prominent female author, as a former avid Hitler worshipper. Michelides also discovered that the Austrian Academy of Sciences had secretly stopped awarding the Franz-Grillparzer-Preis, a prize for dramatists left in trust for that purpose by Austrian national poet Franz Grillparzer. Furthermore, he researched and documented the expansionistic endeavours of großdeutsch-orientated Alfred Toepfer and his close ties to Joseph Goebbels.
As of 1994, Michelides changed his focus to human rights activism and the defence of minorities.
In June 1995 he founded the first International Human Rights Tribunal in Vienna. The tribunal was chaired by human rights activists Freda Meissner-Blau and Gerhard Oberschlick.
In this tribunal, Michelides acted as the attorney general. The theme of the tribunal was the discrimination and persecution of lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender-persons in Austria during the period from 1945 to 1995.
From 1995 to 1997, Michelides chaired the Austrian Lesbian and Gay Forum (ÖLSF) and instigated Austria"s first LGBT parade, called Regenbogenparade (rainbow parade).
In 1998 he started his social work for the homeless. In 2000, Michelides founded Lighthouse Wien, a shelter for homeless drug addicts with severe traumas, many of them Human Immunodeficiency Virus-positive. In 2002, he graduated as a sex and mental health counselor
Since 2009 Michelides has conducted a psychoanalytic men"s group.
He now also works as a group analyst in private practice.