Wall Art India – 5th Edition
10 February – 9 March 2026 | 15 Cities Across India
PUNE: From 10 February to 9 March 2026, India’s public walls will once again become spaces of dialogue, creativity, and shared imagination as Wall Art India returns for its 5th edition, marking a new milestone in one of the country’s most ambitious urban art initiatives.
Led by the Alliance Française network in India, in collaboration with the Embassy of France in India and the Institut Français, Wall Art India has, since 2021, transformed city walls into open-air galleries — free and accessible to all, deeply rooted in local neighbourhoods, and designed to remain part of the urban landscape long after the festival ends.
A month-long artistic journey across India
Spanning 15 cities across the country, the festival brings together 4 internationally recognised artists: two women and two men, three from France (including one from Réunion) and one Indian artist, for a month-long artistic journey shaped by exchange, participation, and shared creation.
- Khatra (India), a Baroda-trained artist, is known for his bold, meditative murals that blend typography, abstraction, and the raw textures of urban space.
- Kashink (France) is a major figure in international street art, whose vibrant, feminist works challenge social norms and celebrate freedom of identity.
- Kesadi (France) draws on his graffiti background to create poetic compositions inspired by everyday scenes and lived urban realities.
- Dey MKO (France / Réunion) develops large-scale murals marked by an intense palette and powerful symbolism, exploring women’s strength, resilience, and collective narratives.
Working closely with local communities, students, NGOs, and neighbourhood youth, the artists will create monumental murals that turn public space into a shared creative ground. Each artwork becomes a meeting point between artists and residents, between India and France, between individual stories and collective memory.
Artist Tours
Kesadi
Pune: 14 Feb – 17 Feb 2026
Venue: Aksharnandan School
Bahirat Wadi, Shivaji Co-operative Housing Society
2026 Theme: Women, Horizons & New Voices in Urban Art
The 2026 edition places women’s creativity and emerging urban voices at the centre of the project. Through murals, workshops, and public encounters, the festival celebrates diversity, resilience, and innovation, while exploring new artistic formats and reinforcing its commitment to inclusion and community participation.
The Grand Finale, to be held in Bangalore on 8 March 2026, on the occasion of International Women’s Day, will bring three artists together for a monumental collaborative mural, marking the culmination of a month of shared creation and cross-cultural dialogue.
Art for all, impact for cities
Since its launch, Wall Art India has:
- Created more than 40 murals across India and Sri Lanka, most of which remain visible today
- Reached over 12,000 on-site visitors during its last edition alone
- Generated strong national and international media coverage, contributing to the cultural visibility of host cities
By taking contemporary art beyond traditional institutions, Wall Art India reflects the vitality of India’s cities and affirms the role of art as a tool for inclusion, dialogue, and urban transformation.
Strong partnerships supporting creativity
The 2026 edition is made possible thanks to the continued support of partners committed to creativity and public engagement, including JSW, whose contribution supports mural production across the country, and, for the first year, Apollo Tyres, joining the project to champion public art, innovation, and community connection.
A shared vision for India’s urban future
In a country where cities are young, fast-changing, and deeply creative, Wall Art India resonates strongly with India’s own street-art movements while offering a meaningful international perspective. More than a festival, it is a national cultural movement — one that places public space, youth, and imagination at the heart of the conversation.

