Music Shaped 2025: musicians and artists create art for charity


How has music shaped your life? For many it’s a question that runs deep, and it’s also the subject that a returning initiative helmed by In Place Of War – a global charity that uses art and creativity as a tool for positive change within some of the world’s most vulnerable and ravaged communities – aims to explore via a new series of specially commissioned collaborations.

‘We had the idea of a kind of “matchmaking” service for visual artists and musical artists from our network and beyond, for a conversation that would then inspire a new artwork,’ explains the project’s senior producer, Rozenn Logan. Last year, Music Shaped’s inaugural outing featured creatives including legendary musician and In Place of War fellow Brian Eno with Icelandic artist Ragnar Jonasson, and Mercury-nominated singer Self Esteem (aka Rebecca Lucy Taylor) with Sheffield photographer Karina Lax. Raising money via an auction of the final works, the project raised £32,000, with Taylor’s photo currently displayed in the National Portrait Gallery in London.

two men standing next to each other

Jeremy Deller and Louis Theroux

(Image credit: Lottie Cripps)

artwork

(Image credit: x)

In 2025, Music Shaped has upped the ante, with 24 creatives across genres and mediums pairing off to inspire a new collection as vibrant and varied as the subject itself. ‘The conversations go off in different directions and tangents, but they’re always within the realms of music, art, creative process, and all the things connected to that,’ Logan continues. ‘Sometimes this spans politics or philosophy, comedy, identity, religion – or just simply how much the colour pink means to someone.’

Among those taking part are Idles vocalist Joe Talbot and Bristol artist Penfold, Radiohead’s Philip Selway and graffiti artist Remi Rough, and Norwegian singer Aurora, who returns for a second year alongside Italian photographic artist Petite Doll. Louis Theroux – who released a song sampling a previous interview clip in 2022 – is paired with Turner Prize-winning Jeremy Deller, while actor Maxine Peake, who has featured on tracks with electronic duo The Eccentronic Research Council, has worked with graphic designer Peter Saville.

two men sat down

Roni Size and My Dog Sighs 

(Image credit: Charlie Miller)

a man and a woman smiling

Don Letts and Charmaine Chanakira

(Image credit: Ryan Saunders)

Comedian and podcast host Adam Buxton teamed up with fellow comedian and visual artist Joe Lycett for their piece: a painting in Lycett’s bright, purposefully naive style of a Casio VL-Tone keyboard, adorned with the phrase ‘Fucking Amateurs’. ‘I think we both feel like amateurs in some way, and for me [finding the Casio VL-Tone] was a really important moment of appreciating that you could make worthwhile music with very little actual musical skill,’ says Buxton, who released his debut album Buckle Up earlier this year. ‘I always loved that synthesisers and cheap keyboards opened the door to the world of music to someone like me. But I was also aware that a lot of people really hated those sounds for that reason, and thought it wasn’t proper music. So I guess the painting is giving a voice to those who really hate people like me,’ he laughs, ‘and the kind of music that I love and make.’



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