The Mango Tree Festival returns to Bengaluru on April 11, 2026, transforming PEBBLE The Jungle Lounge into an immersive celebration of sustainability, art, and community. Mango Tree Festival
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The Mango Tree Festival Returns To Bengaluru For A Day Of Art & Rhythm

The Mango Tree Festival is bringing together conscious markets, interactive art spaces, and a community-driven music experience on 11 April.

Avani Adiga

The Mango Tree Festival returns to Bengaluru on April 11, 2026, transforming PEBBLE The Jungle Lounge into an immersive celebration of sustainability, art, and community. Blending a conscious marketplace of handcrafted goods with interactive art spaces, workshops, and a pet-friendly zone, the festival invites attendees to engage rather than observe. As day turns to night, a lineup of homegrown musicians and experimental sounds creates a deeply communal atmosphere.

Tucked within the leafy expanse of PEBBLE The Jungle Lounge, The Mango Tree Festival returns on 11th April as a space to gather, wander, and feel. Framed as a summer celebration of art, culture, music, and community, The Mango Tree unfolds like a long afternoon under shade: fluid, organic, and quietly immersive.

At its heart is a living, breathing marketplace, with stalls featuring all handcrafted and sustainable products, bringing together rare collectibles, handcrafted objects, and independent creators from across the country. It is a fully sustainable and conscious market, where objects carry stories, where the act of buying feels closer to an exchange than a purchase.

The festival further opens into its Art Village — a space alive with live art, tattoos, and hands-on workshops, making guests step directly into creativity instead of witnessing it from far. The Art Village also has a Pet Zone, where brands that do NGO services for pets will also be featured in the festival. From a Ceramic Clay Workshop to a Puppet Making Workshop, the Mango Tree Festival has something for everyone who has a little bit of whimsy and curiosity.

The festival further opens into its Art Village — a space alive with live art, tattoos, and hands-on workshops, making guests step directly into creativity instead of witnessing it from far.

But as the day stretches into evening, the festival shifts. The stillness gives way to rhythm. Indigenous and experimental sounds take over — jungle beats, ecstatic dance, a kind of collective release that feels both primal and deeply communal. With musical acts like Kerala based tabla and sitar duo Vinod and Naseer, multi-instrumentalist Martin Dubois from Goa and Bengaluru artists, DJ Mahaa and Unnayaana closing the evening, the Mango Tree Festival’s musical lineup is a celebration of everything homegrown and authentic.

There is also a quiet intentionality in how the festival chooses to exist in space. Every element of its décor is rooted in sustainability, nothing is created for a single moment and discarded, but instead drawn from a living archive of materials reused and reimagined over time, and made by the Mango Tree community.

More than anything, The Mango Tree Festival offers a return: to craft, to conversation, to the simple act of being under open skies with others who are willing to slow down. And long after the music fades and the lights come down, that feeling stays with you, like the aftertaste of something sweet, reminding you that slowing down is a way back to yourself.

Follow them on Instagram for more updates and buy tickets for the event here.

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