Brusk’s Marais mural trail
Lyon-based artist Brusk has been rolling out a free street-art trail in the Marais — Délire(s) d’errance has revealed roughly one new large mural a day since March 13 and will land about ten big frescoes across the district (sortiraparis.com). The project turns the Marais into an open-air gallery during Urban Art Fair week, so you can hop a walking route and catch consecutive unveilings for free (sortiraparis.com).
Brusk frames the route as a contemporary Don Quixote cycle, reworking the knight into a persona he calls "DQXT" — a "fou lucide" who navigates today's information-saturated city. (Sortiraparis.com) (sortiraparis.com) The frescoes are concentrated around the Carreau du Temple in Paris' 3rd arrondissement, while the project's culminating piece is staged at the M.U.R. Bastille (38 rue de la Roquette) in the 11th. (Sortiraparis.com) (sortiraparis.com) The trail is timed to coincide with the Urban Art Fair's 10th-anniversary program at the Carreau du Temple, scheduled for March 19–22, 2026, with Brusk presenting a gallery-side "restitution" of the project at his fair stand. (Sortiraparis.com) (sortiraparis.com) An interactive route map and daily updates are published on Brusk's official site, bybrusk.com, to help viewers locate each unveiling across the neighborhood. (bybrusk.com) (bybrusk.com) The M.U.R. Bastille commission is presented as an ephemeral, rotating wall—part of a sequence of guest artists that also produce numbered lithographs of their ephemeral murals for collectors. (Artistikrezo.com) (artistikrezo.com) Brusk is Cédric Kozluk, born near Lyon in 1976, a long-time figure in the French graffiti scene whose recent projects include the Olympic-era "Faites vos jeux" series prior to this Don Quixote cycle. (bybrusk.com) (bybrusk.com)