Do you list every art event near me?
No. art.kubus focuses on mapping places for public and street art discovery first. Updates can include event signals, but we do not claim to have a complete calendar for every city.
Public & street art
Searching for art events near you often starts with a simple question: where do people actually gather around culture? art.kubus helps by mapping public art and street art places you can visit any day, then pairing that context with community updates so you can spot new happenings without spammy event claims.
Even when you do not have a full event calendar, a map of public art and street art gives you an instant plan. Build a route around murals, installations, and landmarks, then leave time for detours. If you want a street art focused walk, start with the street art map. If you want sculptures and monuments, start with the public art map.
An art event is more valuable when you know the neighborhood and the nearby cultural landscape. Use city pages to see what is already mapped and to discover local art in your city beyond one-off listings. That context helps you decide whether a pop-up, festival, or opening is worth your time, especially when you are traveling.
For updates, use the newsletter and social channels. art.kubus shares development progress, new city coverage, and community highlights. For day-specific schedules, check official venue calendars and city cultural listings, then use the map to choose neighborhoods to explore before or after. When event signals are available, they are communicated as updates rather than guaranteed listings. The goal is to help you discover art events in your city without overpromising completeness.
If you discover a mural corridor, a public installation, or a community project that attracts gatherings, submit the location through the app. Accurate place data is the foundation for better discovery. Keep submissions public, minimal, and respectful, and avoid personal information. Over time, stronger place coverage makes event discovery easier too.
No. art.kubus focuses on mapping places for public and street art discovery first. Updates can include event signals, but we do not claim to have a complete calendar for every city.
Use the map to build an art route around public art and murals, then subscribe to updates for new highlights. City pages help you understand where cultural activity clusters.
Open the city pages and the map preview, pick a few nearby markers, and plan a walk. Pair that route with local venues and community sources for day-specific event schedules.
You can contribute places and artwork locations through the app. For time-specific event schedules, prefer official sources and keep submissions respectful and non-spammy.
This page is maintained by the art.kubus editorial team using public-source research, local context, and community-verified map contributions.
Editorial and research team: art.kubus editorial team