Who is this page for?
It is for galleries, museums, festivals, collectives, archives and cultural teams that want to connect programmes and public works to the art map.
Public & street art
art.kubus helps galleries, museums, festivals, collectives and archives publish programmes, exhibitions and artworks, connect them to locations and contribute to a public art archive.
Institutions can use art.kubus to make programmes, exhibitions and public works easier to discover through map context, artist profiles and archive records. The platform should complement institutional publishing rather than replace it.
Location matters for public art, festivals and exhibitions. Connecting artworks to places helps visitors understand how a work sits between public space, gallery space and the web.
Planned AR interpretation can extend selected works with context, audio, 3D forms or guided layers. AR remains in development and should be presented as experimental until specific features are available.
An institution is not only a venue. In art.kubus it can operate as a node in a broader cultural network: contributing reliable archive material, strengthening discovery and making public cultural data more resilient.
It is for galleries, museums, festivals, collectives, archives and cultural teams that want to connect programmes and public works to the art map.
The platform direction supports publishing programmes, exhibitions and artworks as discoverable cultural records, depending on enabled features and partnership scope.
AR interpretation is in development and should be described as planned or experimental until a concrete implementation is available.
By providing reliable public records, programme context, locations, artist links and archive material appropriate for public discovery.
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