Ibiza’s nightlife landscape is undergoing a major cultural transformation this summer as Hï Ibiza, Ushuaïa Ibiza, and [UNVRS] host Culture Collective, a season-long contemporary art exhibition developed by The Night League in collaboration with W1 Curates.
Officially launched last weekend, the initiative features works by more than 70 international artists across large-scale installations, digital commissions, sculpture, murals, and projection-based works. Moreover, the project repositions some of Ibiza’s most recognizable nightlife venues as hybrid cultural spaces that merge club culture with contemporary art practice.
The exhibition runs daily through mid-October 2026, making it one of Europe’s largest public-facing seasonal art programmes integrated within entertainment venues.
Hï Ibiza and [UNVRS] Introduce Monumental Site-Specific Installations
At Hï Ibiza, the rooftop terrace has been transformed into a 70-meter digital gallery inaugurated with a site-specific work by Michael Craig-Martin. Additionally, the venue’s exterior now features 10-meter murals by Spanish duo PichiAvo and UK artist EPOD.
The gardens surrounding the venue now house two life-size Carrara marble sculptures by Nazareno Biondo depicting a Fiat 500 and a Vespa, each carved from 15-ton stone blocks.
Meanwhile, the entrance façade of [UNVRS] features a 68-square-meter stone bas-relief by Portuguese artist VHILS. Carved directly into the building’s architecture, the work expands the artist’s ongoing exploration of urban surfaces, erosion, and portraiture.
Digital Art and Music Culture Drive the Exhibition’s Cross-Disciplinary Focus
The programme also foregrounds digital and immersive media. Artist Pascal Sender presents “Hydronicum,” a projection-mapping installation that animates physical paintings through moving light compositions.
Additionally, Harry Yeff introduces “Voice Gems,” a project that translates the vocal signatures of resident DJs into physical, digital artworks generated by voice-print technology.
Beyond the installations, Culture Collective launched with a symposium featuring conversations among participating artists and creative figures from the music, fashion, and design industries, including representatives from Gorillaz and Palm Angels.
By integrating museum-scale works into nightlife environments, Culture Collective reflects a broader shift toward experiential and interdisciplinary cultural programming. Consequently, the project challenges traditional distinctions between gallery spaces, entertainment venues, and public art platforms while expanding access to contemporary art audiences outside institutional settings.




