This summer, nightlife and fine art collide at a scale the continent has never really seen before.
From Dance Floors to Full-Scale Galleries
Ibiza’s most iconic venues — Hï Ibiza, Ushuaïa Ibiza, and UNVRS — have been transformed into a sprawling, season-long art experience.
The initiative, titled Culture Collective, brings together over 70 international artists and runs daily through October 2026, effectively turning the island into one of Europe’s largest open-format exhibitions.
Monumental Installations Replace Traditional Displays
Inside and around the clubs, the scale is intentionally overwhelming.
At Hï Ibiza, a 70-meter digital gallery stretches across the rooftop, launched with a site-specific work by Michael Craig-Martin. Exterior walls feature massive murals from PichiAvo and EPOD, while the gardens now house hand-carved marble sculptures by Nazareno Biondo — including a Fiat 500 and Vespa carved from 15-ton stone blocks.
Digital and Architectural Art Take Center Stage
At UNVRS, the experience leans even more immersive.
A massive bas-relief by VHILS is carved directly into the building’s facade, while digital works like Pascal Sender’s projection-based installations and Harry Yeff’s voice-generated sculptures push the boundaries of how art is created and experienced.
A Lineup That Blends Art, Music, and Culture
The artist roster spans disciplines and global influence, including names like Hajime Sorayama and collaborators tied to Gorillaz, reinforcing the crossover between visual art, music, and pop culture.
The opening weekend even featured talks and panels, signaling that this is not just an installation series but a broader cultural platform.
Rewriting Where Art Lives
The core idea behind Culture Collective is simple: move art out of traditional galleries and into spaces where people already gather.
By embedding large-scale, museum-level works into nightlife environments, Ibiza is redefining how audiences engage with contemporary art — making it more immediate, social, and impossible to ignore.
For summer 2026, the island is no longer just a party destination. It is one of the most ambitious art experiences in Europe.




