Slow Art Day is Saturday, April 11, 2026 Join Us!
Photo by Greg Neville

Slow Art Day News

Slow Art Day 15th Anniversary Annual Report

March 29th, 2026

Slow Art Day 2026 is coming up Saturday, April 11, and I’m happy to announce today the publication of our 2025 Annual Report, which details many of the events held last year.

Read it and get inspired to plan your 2026 events (register your museum, gallery, church, sculpture park or movie theater for 2026, if you have not yet done so).

Over 15 years, educators and curators at museums and galleries around the world have built something extraordinary:

– More than 1,500 events across every continent — including Antarctica
– Endless creativity in how people experience art slowly
– The rise of citywide events — Mexico City had 37 venues in 2025 and is growing to 55+ in 2026 – to Central Illinois, which helped pioneer the citywide model and this year is producing a region-wide Slow Art Day/weekend of events up and down Route 66
– Expansion into churches, hospitals, and community spaces
– New collaborations, including with Never Search Alone, bringing job seekers together through art and community

At its core, the idea remains simple: help people slow down and really see.

But there is a second idea — to open up the art world.

No expertise required. No background assumed. Just people, looking at art, together.

This movement is built locally, event by event, by people like you.

And in a time of growing division and isolation, that matters more than ever.

When people gather to look slowly at art — and then talk about what they see — they connect. They build trust. They remember their shared humanity.

That is what thousands have helped to create.

We look forward to our next 15 years when we believe art will be ever more important.

Thank you.

Phyl Terry

P.S. I want to give special thanks to the Slow Art Day Annual Report team led by Ashley Moran, Editor, and writers Johanna Bokedal, and Jessica Jane Nocella. They work tirelessly to produce this Annual Report and volunteer weekends, mornings, evenings throughout the year. 

They fit this in between their full-time job (Ashley Moran at Comcast in the United States), full-time job/PhD student (Johanna Bokedal in Norway), and full-time post-doc work (Jessica Jane in Italy). 

And while we are at it, let’s celebrate volunteer Maggie Freeman who is the global director and registrar for Slow Art Day. Maggie started volunteering 10 years ago when she was a sophomore at Mills College. Today, she is finishing her PhD in Islamic Art and Architecture at MIT and somehow, like the others, still finds time to volunteer.

A “Very Slow Viewing Tour” at Tallinn Art Hall’s Lasnamäe Pavilion in Estonia

March 28th, 2026

For their first Slow Art Day, Tallinn Art Hall Lasnamäe Pavilion in Estonia hosted a contemplative “very slow viewing tour” within the exhibition featuring works by artists Vladimir Yankilevsky and Valeri Vinogradov.

Led by curator and guide Aljona Tubaleva, the session invited visitors to enter the exhibition space as a spiritual and emotional landscape—a place where human feelings, perceptions, and ideas unfold beyond what is immediately visible.

The tour began with a grounding exercise that helped participants slow down and focus inward before turning their attention to the artworks around them. In this calm atmosphere, visitors explored the relationships between colors, shapes, and emotional undertones within the works.

Participants were encouraged to notice how their interpretations evolved as they learned more about the exhibition’s curatorial concept and the artists’ intentions. By consciously shifting their focus—sometimes inward toward their own emotional responses and sometimes outward toward the artwork—visitors discovered how meaning can change through attentive observation.

The slow tour emphasized curiosity and personal reflection. Rather than rushing through the exhibition, participants were invited to think about how their feelings might take shape within the “artistic landscape” created by the works on view.

We at Slow Art Day HQ are grateful to Aljona Tubaleva and the team at Tallinn Art Hall for creating such a thoughtful and meditative slow looking experience at the Lasnamäe Pavilion.

We look forward to what they come up with for Slow Art Day 2026, which is coming up April 11, 2026.

— Ashley, Johanna, Jessica Jane, and Phyl

P.S. If you have not yet registered your museum of gallery for Slow Art Day 2026, please do.

Two-Day Slow Art Journey in San Francisco

March 27th, 2026

For Slow Art Day 2025, Bay Area participant Div hosted a unique, two-day experience that blended group slow looking at museums with individual ature observation, photography, and handmade art. The gathering, titled “Nowhere Div – Slow Art Day – San Francisco,” invited participants to slow down and reconnect with art through both creative practice and mindful observation.

Div’s personal experience unfolded over two days and across several locations in San Francisco, beginning with a slow walk through parks and gardens near Golden Gate Park and a reflective visit to the de Young Museum.

Div documented a series of seven “slow moments” during the journey, each centered on noticing beauty and emotional resonance in everyday surroundings. These moments included quiet reflection among the tulips at the Queen Wilhelmina Garden, a feeling of awe along Ocean Beach, and time spent with artworks at the de Young Museum. The walk continued through several locations in and around Golden Gate Park, including the Rose Garden, the Japanese Tea Garden, the Conservatory of Flowers, and the San Francisco Botanical Garden. You can read more about Div’s personal journey on their blog post.

Each stop became an opportunity to pause and look carefully. Flowers, trees, and landscapes were photographed and paired with short reflections. Together, these observations formed a contemplative visual journal inspired by the spirit of Slow Art Day.

The following day, Div hosted a small community gathering in the Bayview neighborhood of San Francisco. Participants were invited to spend time with handmade butterfly origami mandala wall art and floral photography created by the host. The session included prompts encouraging visitors to reflect on the experience of slow looking and to consider how spending more time with an artwork changes perception and emotional connection.

By combining museum visits, nature photography, and handmade artwork within a personal gathering, Div created a thoughtful example of how Slow Art Day can extend beyond formal institutions into everyday life. The experience demonstrated that slow looking can happen anywhere—from galleries and gardens to community spaces and personal creative practice.

We at Slow Art Day HQ are grateful to Div for sharing this reflective and deeply personal approach to Slow Art Day and look forward to what they come up with for Slow Art Day 2026, which is coming up April 11, 2026!

— Ashley, Johanna, Jessica Jane, and Phyl

P.S. If you have not yet registered your museum of gallery for Slow Art Day 2026, please do.

Multi-Sensory Experience at Maryhill Museum

March 26th, 2026

For their fifth Slow Art Day, the Maryhill Museum of Art in Goldendale, Washington hosted a lively and imaginative slow looking session led by Curator of Education Sorcha Meek Paul.

Participants gathered to spend time with two paintings from the museum’s permanent collection:

  1. The Wedding Feast c.1660 by Gillis van Tilborg the Younger. Oil on Canvas. Flemish, c. 1625-c.1678
  2. The Crofters’ Kitchen, 1884 by Rober Henry Roe. Oil on canvas. British, 1822-1905

The session began with several minutes of quiet observation. Visitors were invited to share their initial impressions using the simple phrase “I see…”, taking turns describing what they noticed in the paintings. This approach helped participants to focus on careful observation as well as helped to create community by having the participants build on each other’s discoveries.

Next, Sorcha guided the group through a sensory exercise designed to deepen engagement with the artworks. Participants were asked to imagine stepping into the paintings and to consider what they might smell in the scene. When looking at The Wedding Feast, this question sparked laughter as visitors imagined the smells of food, drink, and a bustling celebration.

Visitors then imagined what they might hear, leading to the discovery of new details, including a man playing a lute in the background of the lively gathering. Participants also considered taste and touch.

Only after this extended slow looking and imaginative exploration did Sorcha introduce historical context. Participants learned that The Wedding Feast was painted around the same era as Johannes Vermeer created Girl with a Pearl Earring, prompting participants to notice similarities.

One of the highlights of the session was the participation of children. For the first time in their Slow Art Day design, they invited younger visitors to join the discussion. The young people brought fresh observations and enthusiasm. As Sorcha noted, it was especially rewarding to see a 10-year-old become excited about looking closely at art.

Through quiet observation, sensory imagination, and shared discovery, the Slow Art Day program at Maryhill Museum of Art created community and joy for visitors of all ages.

We at Slow Art Day HQ are grateful to Sorcha Meek Paul and the team at Maryhill Museum of Art for creating such an engaging and welcoming experience and look forward to what they come up with for Slow Art Day 2026, which is coming up April 11, 2026.

— Ashley, Johanna, Jessica Jane, and Phyl

P.S. If you have not yet registered your museum of gallery for Slow Art Day 2026, please do.