Wembley Park teams with Pantone to commemorate Coldplay’s ‘Yellow’

The collaboration marks the start of the group’s UK tour

North London neighborhood and entertainment district Wembley Park has unveiled a new, large-scale public art installation in collaboration with Pantone, the global colour authority and provider of professional color language standards and digital solutions for the design community.

Titled Yellow 25, the outdoor installation pays tribute to Coldplay, who formed in London, ahead of the band’s ten sold-out shows at Wembley Stadium, honoring the 25th anniversary of their breakthrough hit, “Yellow,” first released as a single in the UK on June 26, 2000.

For this installation, Wembley Park tapped Pantone’s team of color experts at the Pantone Color Institute to create a colour journey across the neighbourhood’s Spanish Steps, drawing inspiration from the full emotional and melodic arc of the iconic song.

The Pantone Color Institute team matched each of the 58 steps to a specific shade of yellow using the Pantone Matching System, starting with pale, muted tones and building to deeper, more luminous golds to reflect the song’s progression. Additionally, the song is framed within Pantone’s iconic chip, further illuminating the accuracy of the colors from concept to reality.

Yellow 25 is located on Wembley Park’s Spanish Steps, a key pedestrian link between two of the UK’s most iconic live venues: Wembley Stadium and the OVO Arena Wembley, formerly Wembley Arena.

Now in its fourth year, Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres World Tour lands in the UK on August 18th, with a record-breaking ten-night run at Wembley Stadium starting on August 22nd.

This public thoroughfare has become a symbolic stage in its own right. In 2024, it was transformed to celebrate Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour with the fan-favourite mural Auras by British artist Frank Styles. Now, it marks another cultural milestone, spotlighting Coldplay’s lasting legacy and influence in British pop music.

The latest addition to the free, public Wembley Park Art Trail, Yellow 25 transforms this multi-platinum global hit song into a visual story told through colour and applied across Wembley Park’s urban canvas.

Yellow is a color with deep roots. Across cultures and centuries, it has been associated with sunlight, joy, clarity, and divinity. Ancient civilisations such as the Egyptians and Greeks used yellow to represent the life-giving power of the sun, a source of warmth and emotional strength.

Coldplay’s “Yellow” taps into those same qualities. It is a song about love, hope, and devotion. Pantone’s approach focused on nuance. Each colour was chosen not only for its visual quality, but for how it reflects the emotional tone of each part of the track. Softer, desaturated yellows express moments of tenderness and uncertainty. As the melody rises, the shades brighten and shift, carrying the song’s energy and momentum. By the chorus, the yellows become fuller, deeper, more expressive. The bridge reaches peak intensity before softening again into a warm, luminous calm.

Pantone’s process involved more than matching colour to mood. The team considered saturation levels, tonal depth and the space between each hue to reflect the dynamic movement of the music. The installation mirrors the song’s structure, step by step, turning lyrics and melody into a visual path.

The result is something quiet but open. Whether you know the song or not, the colour invites you in. It speaks to hope, warmth, devotion and light. These are feelings that are shared and universal.

The Yellow Steps are also part of Wembley Park’s wider commitment to making culture visible in everyday public life. By bringing music into the built environment in this way, the piece connects not only two of the UK’s most iconic venues, Wembley Stadium and the OVO Arena Wembley, but also the people moving between them.

In keeping with Wembley Park’s commitment to sustainability, Yellow 25 has been produced using a PVC-free film that contains no chlorine, plasticisers, or heavy metals, making it less harmful to the environment and easier to recycle than traditional vinyl. Once the installation ends, it will be fully recycled and transformed into practical items like street cones, giving the artwork a purposeful second life.

Yellow 25 is part of the Wembley Park Art Trail, which features large-scale works across the neighborhood. Highlights include the now globally viral tributes to Taylor Swift, a mural dedicated to Lana Del Rey, and the Square of Fame, where visitors can see the handprints of artists including Madonna, George Michael, The Who, Bryan Adams, Kylie Minogue, and Dolly Parton. The installation is free and runs until September 30th.

Buddy Iahn
Buddy Iahn