Indian Street Art Just Had Its Biggest Year Yet and Most People Missed It
- Wilson

- Mar 27
- 4 min read
Updated: 1 hour ago
There is a wall in Lodhi Colony in Delhi that stops people mid-walk every single day. Has been doing it for years. The St+art India foundation has turned a government housing colony into one of the most visited outdoor galleries in Asia, and the artists who painted those walls are now showing in galleries from Seoul to Berlin. Indian street art has graduated India's Independent Music Scene Is. It left the periphery and it is sitting firmly in the conversation about global contemporary art.
The only people not talking about it are the ones not paying attention. India's Himalayan Kingdom Paintings
The geography of it has expanded dramatically in the past two years. Lodhi is the famous one, but Shahpur Jat in Delhi has its own dense ecosystem of murals. Bandra in Mumbai has been a site for commissioned street art for years and the newer work is getting more ambitious. The Dharavi Art Room has been doing extraordinary community-embedded work. Kochi Biennale has been a launchpad for artists who blur the line between installation and street practice.
Chennai, Hyderabad, and Pune all have active public art communities now. Rs 167 Crore for One Painting: Raja
Indian Street Art Just in India
The artists driving this are increasingly young and increasingly political. Not political in a sloganeering way, but in the way that choosing what to paint on a public wall is inherently a political act. Work exploring caste, queerness, climate, urban displacement, and indigenous identity is showing up in the most visible public spaces in the country. Some of it has been painted over by authorities. Most of it survives. All of it generates conversation that the artists say is the
point.
The Instagram effect on street art has been complicated and fascinating. On one hand, the visibility is extraordinary. A mural in a lane in Bhopal can reach a hundred thousand people before the paint is dry if the artist posts at the right time. On the other hand, there is a genre of Instagram street art that optimises for the photo opportunity rather than the neighbourhood it exists in. The best artists are aware of both pulls and are deliberate
about which one they are feeding at any given moment.
The loss of Hanif Kureshi in September 2024 was a serious blow to this community. The St+art India co-founder, who passed away aged 41, spent over a decade building the infrastructure that made all of this possible, from the Lodhi Art District to over 600 murals across 29 cities. Yantr, DAKU, Inkbrushnme, and the many artists he championed are the living continuation of that work. The pipeline between Indian street art and global contemporary art is his most lasting contribution.
Why This Matters for Desi Culture
The murals that are about hyperlocal stories are often the most striking. There is a tradition in parts of Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh of folk mural painting on village walls that has been bleeding into the contemporary street art conversation. Artists trained in Warli, Madhubani, Bhil art, and Gond painting traditions are finding that public walls are actually the most appropriate venue for a practice that was always meant to be communal. The fusion of these traditions with contemporary street
art language is producing work that is genuinely original.
If you have not done the Lodhi Colony walk yet, do it this weekend. It takes two to three hours, it is free, and the density of world-class work concentrated in one neighbourhood is something you would not believe without seeing it. Take someone who thinks art is only for galleries. Watch their face change about three walls in. That moment is the whole argument for public art made visible. Street art at its best does not ask you to come to it.
It just shows up where you are and does not apologise.
Which city's street art scene has impressed you most? Tell us where we should be looking next.
Indian street art's biggest year yet is a claim that gets made every year and keeps being true because the scene keeps growing in ways that make each previous year look like a warmup. The Lodhi Art District in Delhi has become an internationally recognised destination. Mumbai's Bandra art trail attracts more visitors than most paid cultural venues in the city. Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Ahmedabad, and Kochi are all developing distinct local street art identities that are building on each other's momentum. What 2026 added is scale in tier-2 cities. Indore's clean city confidence extended into murals that turned public walls into genuine cultural statements. Coimbatore artists found walls and commissions that did not exist three years ago. The scene is decentralising in the way that all healthy creative movements eventually do — from a few dense centres to a distributed network of nodes that collectively add up to something bigger than any individual city's contribution. The artists driving this are young, technically skilled, and deeply connected to their local context in ways that international street artists commissioned for big projects often are not. Local knowledge creates better art on public walls because the references land with the people who live there. That specificity is what separates genuinely resonant public art from impressive-looking wallpaper. The biggest year yet will be surpassed. The question is which city produces the most significant new work next.




Comments