There is a query that quietly haunts each artist who’s been round some time: Am I really saying one thing, or am I simply making issues look good?
Anthony Burrill, the graphic artist behind the famed Work Onerous & Be Good to Individuals poster, has spent three a long time wrestling with that stress. And most not too long ago, the reply arrived in a 3×3 metre plywood construction on a pageant website in Somerset.
In a chat to members of our personal non-public community, The Studio, Anthony took us behind the scenes of the Conflict Baby Pavilion at Glastonbury 2025. He’d labored with furnishings and product designer Michael Marriott to design this daring set up for Conflict Baby, the charity that works to guard youngsters whose lives have been torn aside by armed battle.
It was, by any cheap measure, a logistical headache; constructed on virtually no finances, assembled in a Bristol workshop as a flat-pack package of components, pushed to the location, and erected in two days by a small crew. Anthony slept in a tent. He cherished each second of it.
A landmark made from letters
The pavilion sat in Silver Hayes, Glastonbury’s devoted space for digital music and DJs. It is a heaving, bass-heavy nook of the pageant that is about as removed from quiet contemplation as you may get. Rising above it had been 4 big letters spelling HOPE, seen over the heads of passing crowds and rapidly adopted as a gathering level. Under them, a small constructing wrapped in Anthony’s signature woodblock typography and daring diagonal stripes carried the messages ‘Maintain On To Hope’ and ‘No Baby Ought to Be A part of Conflict. Ever’.



Inside, Conflict Baby volunteers invited festival-goers to put in writing messages on postcards embedded with wildflower seeds. Afterwards, the playing cards had been composted to create a meadow, turning 1000’s of scribbled hopes into one thing that may actually develop.
What made the undertaking actually sing, says Anthony, was the liberty. “When Conflict Baby work with artists, they allow us to use our full creativity,” he explains. “I did not have any model pointers to work with; the inventive side was utterly open. So I might actually put my stamp on it.”
That absence of pointers would possibly make some creatives nervous. For Anthony, it was the entire level.
The lengthy highway to doing precisely what you need
Anthony’s profession to this point is a helpful case examine in inventive persistence. He studied graphic design at Leeds Poly, then accomplished an MA on the Royal School of Artwork within the early Nineties; an period he recollects fondly for its full absence of computer systems. “The whole lot was handmade in these days,” he smiles. “The whole lot was analogue and scratchy. You’d use discovered objects, issues we discovered on the road, and simply use them to create work.”
After graduating, he spent years in industrial work earlier than rising annoyed with the compromises it demanded. “I used to be on the mercy of an artwork director,” he recollects. “I might ship stuff in, then get suggestions and have to alter it. And slowly my imaginative and prescient would get watered down.” The answer, reached step by step, was to step away from that world fully. “I simply discovered it arduous to compromise after some time, and get suggestions from folks whose opinion I did not worth,” he says.
A transfer to East Sussex led him to Adams of Rye, a letterpress workshop the place he started producing the daring, analogue poster prints that may outline his follow. Working throughout the bodily restrictions of a small assortment of wooden letter typefaces grew to become a inventive self-discipline in itself. “For me, it was about working inside restrictions and being ingenious and creative with the issues I used to be working with,” he displays.
That philosophy of ‘constraints as liberation’ underpinned the Glastonbury 2025 undertaking too. Restricted finances? Construct a flat-pack. Tiny footprint? Make the letters monumental. No model pointers? Even higher.
The fitting undertaking beats the proper payment
Requested by a Studio member how making the work for Glastonbury and Conflict Baby made him really feel, Anthony is disarmingly trustworthy. “It was type of a dream come true,” he says. “To be a part of the pageant that I really feel such a connection to, and to really see it the week after with a number of folks round it, interacting with it, was actually gratifying.”




He is been going to Glastonbury for years (“5am by the stone circle, speaking in regards to the which means of life”), and that amassed expertise fed straight into the design. The pavilion’s inside even included a sly nod to the Haçienda, the legendary Manchester nightclub, with hazard stripes and color references that felt proper at dwelling in Silver Hayes’ dance music territory. “We knew it was going to be within the dance little bit of Glastonbury,” Anthony explains. “So we thought it might be nice to have that historic reference again to the place all of it started for lots of people, myself included.”
When requested to call his favorite ever Glastonbury yr, Anthony does not hesitate. “Final yr, after I was there with Conflict Baby,” he responds. “As a result of I felt like I used to be a part of it and contributing to it.”
The case for making work that issues
Anthony’s broader message is characteristically direct. “I feel it is necessary for us as creatives to really feel like we’re not simply making work for industrial shoppers, however we’re making it for the widespread good,” he says. “I like visible communication and typography and graphics, however I feel it is much more highly effective when it is really saying one thing.”
He is lifelike, after all, about what might be achieved. “A single poster is not going to alter the world. However I feel if it is a part of a constant message that is being communicated by a number of folks, I feel there’s an opportunity that we will make the world a greater place.”
There is a temptation to be cynical about that kind of assertion, however Anthony has the receipts. His work sits within the everlasting collections of the V&A, the Design Museum and the Cooper Hewitt. He is printed protest posters with oil gathered from the Gulf of Mexico spill and charcoal from Australian wildfires. He made work for Extinction Rebel that was carried out on the streets. And now he is constructed constructions at Glastonbury that double as fundraising hubs for kids in battle zones.
The lesson for creatives is not to work totally free (although Anthony clearly considers the proper undertaking price greater than its bill). It is greater than the work you select to do, and the folks you select to do it with, that form what your follow really means. Or as the person himself would possibly put it, in giant picket letters: maintain on to hope.

