Public & street art

Discover local art by starting with nearby public markers

To discover local art, start with a map instead of a generic city guide. Pick a few nearby public markers, read the context, walk a short route and keep notes on missing murals, installations or cultural places that should be added later.

Start with one area

Choose a neighborhood or city page with a few visible markers. A small route is easier to finish, repeat and improve than a long list of disconnected places.

Mix public art and street art

Public sculptures, murals, memorials and cultural spaces often sit close together. Use the public art map and street art map language as filters, not as hard boundaries.

Check context before visiting

Good records explain what is visible, where it is, and whether attribution is known. For events or opening hours, check local institutions because art.kubus should not overpromise complete live listings.

Contribute what is missing

If a marker is missing or outdated, submit a factual update through the app. Small corrections make the local art map more useful for residents, visitors and cultural communities.

Frequently asked questions

What is the fastest way to find local art?

Open the map, pick a nearby cluster and build a short walking route around two or three public markers.

Is every artwork listed?

No. Coverage grows through community contribution, so the map should be treated as a living archive rather than a complete directory.

Editorial and expertise transparency

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

Contact and collaboration