Slow Art Day 2026 is just a few days away — and I have more good news to share: Saltillo, Mexico is joining the growing global citywide movement.
The capital of Coahuila in northeastern Mexico, Saltillo has long been a vibrant cultural center. This year, it launches its first-ever citywide Slow Art Day, led by Ana Lucía Aguilar — an art enthusiast and expert with the Tec de Monterrey Arts and Culture Department. Lucía Aguilar is bringing together a coalition of cultural institutions across the city including Centro Cultural Casa Purcell, Museo Rubén Herrera, Sala Coca, Centro Cultural La Besana, and Tecnológico de Monterrey Campus Saltillo.
These venues represent a cross-section of Saltillo’s cultural ecosystem — from a traditional fine arts museum to contemporary exhibition spaces, community cultural centers, and an academic institution — and this year they are working together to create a shared day of programming centered on slow looking, reflection, and community engagement (see below).




Further, specials activities will be held for students April 9 and 10. There will be a visit and activity for the final projects exhibition of the Prepa Tec Art course at the Saltillo Campus Library, with high school students. In addition, university students will be invited for a special slow viewing of the exhibition Siempre Cuerpo by Vange Tamez at Centro Cultural La Besana.
As the Saltillo Slow Art Day coalition noted in a press statement, “La observación lenta convierte al museo en un espacio de autodescubrimiento y conexión humana…” In English – “Slow looking transforms the museum into a space for self-discovery and human connection, rather than just a repository of objects for experts.”
Yes — well said.
And this is exactly the deeper promise of Slow Art Day. At its heart, it is an inclusive act — an opening of spaces that have too often felt exclusive, expert-driven, or intimidating. By inviting anyone, regardless of background or training, to simply look slowly and share what they see, Slow Art Day helps transform museums and cultural institutions into places of inclusion, belonging, and shared human experience.
I’ll note that Lucía Aguilar first found out about Slow Art Day in 2025 when Constanza Ontiveros Valdés led Mexico City’s first citywide. She then organized a single event in 2025 at Tecnológico de Monterrey Campus Saltillo. This year, taking a leaf from Ontiveros Valdés, she expanded into a citywide and is doing amazing work bringing together institutions across the city.
We at Slow Art Day HQ are excited to watch the citywide movement spread. As noted in other reports, Ontiveros Valdés in Mexico City was first inspired by Pamala Eaton and the BN Artists in Illinois who were the first anywhere to launch a citywide Slow Art Day. Their momentum continues to build. Their original citywide has now expanded into a celebration across Central Illinois — making that the first region-wide Slow Art Day in the world. Meanwhile, the 2025 Mexico City effort proved so successful that Ontiveros Valdés has since built a volunteer team, launched a dedicated website, and organized a coalition of more than 50 museums, galleries, and cultural venues for 2026.
Wow. Wow. Wow.
This deepening of our Slow Art Day movement could not come at a more important time in our divisive, topsy-turvy world. We need more art, we need more global cooperation, and we need more community — and thanks to many of you we will have all that again with this year’s Slow Art Day.
Best,
Phyl
P.S. As you know, Slow Art Day 2026 is coming up April 11 — register your museum, gallery, church, sculpture park or movie theater for 2026, if you have not yet done so. And maybe start thinking about a citywide celebration next year.
P.P.S. Get inspired by reading our comprehensive 2025 Annual Report providing details and descriptions (as well as artifacts) of more than 76 events from around the world last year.
Happy to report that Slow Art Day 2026 is coming up in 1 week – Sat, Apr 11, 2026 – around the world.
And I’m delighted to welcome another new host to our movement: Nathalie Krall and her organization ArtVenture Club e.V. from Düsseldorf, Germany.
ArtVenture Club e.V. is a global, digitally native nonprofit network that connects freelance and self-employed art professionals, scholars, and creatives. Their mission is to foster a more fair, diverse, and sustainable art world by bringing together practitioners and the public in thoughtful dialogue and shared experiences. Their work has been recognized in Germany’s UNESCO State Report on cultural diversity.

On April 11, 2026, they will host their first Slow Art Day event — a fully online session via Zoom, open to participants around the world. They are calling the event “Die Kunst des langsamen Sehens” (The Art of slow Seeing).
It’s free to attend with registration via Eventbrite (note: this session will be in German).
During the pandemic, many museums, galleries, and community groups experimented with virtual formats, expanding access during a time of global isolation. What makes this event notable is not simply that it is digital — but that it comes from an organization built natively for digital cultural engagement, with a clear and thoughtful philosophy behind it.
Krall explained to me that she sees online slow looking as a meaningful expansion of access and engagement, as it will:
– increase accessibility for people who cannot attend in person
– create inclusive spaces across geographic and social boundaries
– function as an independent mode of engagement with art.
I’ll add that Krall has designed it so that participants will chose three artworks for everyone to look at via a live poll at the beginning of the session. The selected works — high-resolution digital images drawn from among ArtVenture Club’s past 50 programs — will then be shared on screen and via links for deeper individual exploration.
As noted, this first Slow Art Day will be conducted in German, though they have plans to add English-language sessions in the future.
Please help us welcome Nathalie Krall and ArtVenture Club e.V. to the global Slow Art Day community.
Happy almost Slow Art Day!
– Phyl
P.S. As you know, Slow Art Day 2026 is coming up April 11 — register your museum, gallery, church, sculpture park or movie theater for 2026, if you have not yet done so.
P.P.S. Get inspired by reading our comprehensive 2025 Annual Report providing details and descriptions (as well as artifacts) of more than 76 events from around the world last year.
Slow Art Day 2026 is just over a week away – and more big news: Bogotá, Colombia joins the growing global movement toward citywide Slow Art Day celebrations.
This inaugural citywide in Bogotá is led by Mauricio Ávila, Consejero Distrital de Infraestructura Cultural (District Advisor for Cultural Infrastructure), and centered in San Felipe Distrito Creativo (SF), which is Bogotá’s leading arts district. Often referred to simply as “SF,” the district brings together a dense network of contemporary galleries, artist studios, and creative venues, making it a natural anchor for Bogotá’s citywide Slow Art Day (see map image below).

As part of his role as District Advisor, Ávila decided to launch this first citywide in Bogotá. He was initially inspired by Constanza Ontiveros Valdés — an art writer and cultural project leader – who launched the first citywide Slow Art Day in Mexico City in 2025 and has expanded it in 2026 (more below). As you’ll see below, Ontiveros Valdés was in turn inspired by Pamala Eaton, Janean Baird and the whole team in Bloomington, Illinois who launched the first citywide anywhere.
Building on those examples, Ávila has organized five galleries and art spaces to pilot the Bogotá edition:
Together, these venues represent a cross-section of the contemporary art scene in SF — from independent galleries to artist-run spaces (see photos below).

We at Slow Art Day HQ are excited to watch the citywide movement spread organically around the world. As noted above, Constanza Ontiveros Valdés in Mexico City was inspired by Pamala Eaton and the BN Artists in Illinois who were the first anywhere to launch a citywide Slow Art Day. Their momentum continues to build. Their original citywide has now expanded into a celebration across Central Illinois — making that the first region-wide Slow Art Day in the world. Meanwhile, the 2025 Mexico City effort proved so successful that Ontiveros Valdés has since built a volunteer team, launched a dedicated website, and organized a coalition of more than 55 museums, galleries, and cultural venues for 2026.
Wow. Wow. Wow.
This deepening of our Slow Art Day movement could not come at a more important time in our divisive, topsy-turvy world. We need more art, we more global cooperation, and we need more community – and thanks to many of you we will have all that again with this year’s Slow Art Day.
Best,
Phyl
P.S. As you know, Slow Art Day 2026 is coming up April 11 — register your museum, gallery, church, sculpture park or movie theater for 2026, if you have not yet done so. And maybe start thinking about a citywide celebration next year.
Slow Art Day 2026 is just over a week away – and big news – BN Artists, a team of artists in Bloomington-Normal, Illinois, have now expanded their pioneering citywide event to become the first region-wide celebration anywhere in the world. Wow.
Aligned with the 100th anniversary of Route 66, Slow Art Day on Route 66 will be a Central Illinois region-wide series of events created by BN Artists along with a grassroots coalition of museums, libraries, small business owners, and cultural leaders, and with marketing support from Visit Bloomington-Normal and the Illinois Route 66 Scenic Byway. Together, they have set up a distributed, community-driven arts experience spanning more than 20 locations across several cities in Central Illinois (see below my signature for links to galleries, museums, libraries and other locations).
Pamala Eaton, who started the Slow Art Day movement in Bloomington when she launched the first citywide event in 2022, says this initiative has helped grow not just the arts community, but the region as a whole. “Collaborating with artists, galleries, and businesses across our community for Slow Art Day has increased visibility for the local art scene and is now attracting more local and out-of-town visitors to our art locations and everything else our towns offer.” Eaton is a gallerist and owner of Herb Eaton Studio & Gallery.
Here is the wonderful Slow Art Day on Route 66 poster –

The event will begin with a Preview Night on Friday, April 3 (First Friday), where visitors can explore downtown Bloomington galleries and meet local artists. The main Slow Art Day will then take place on Saturday, April 11 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., followed by a closing reception from 2:30 to 5 p.m. at Herb Eaton Studio & Gallery. Additional programming will continue throughout the weekend and beyond, including a special slow looking and art making experience on Sunday, April 12 at 410 Sculpture Park in partnership with the Bloomington Public Library.
The connection to Route 66 adds a wonderful dimension. Long celebrated as part of the American experience, Route 66 represents movement, exploration, and the stories we carry across distance. Slow Art Day gently inverts that idea — inviting people not to pass through, but to pause, to look closely, and to build connection where they are.
As local arts educator Hannah Johnson noted, slow looking and slow making are “transformative acts in our exceedingly expeditious world.” That spirit is evident throughout the region — from galleries and museums to libraries, sculpture parks, and public spaces.
Participants will be encouraged to explore multiple locations, collect stamps in the Art Scene in McLean County Passport, and experience the diversity of artistic expression across Central Illinois. The result will be not just a series of events, but a shared regional experience built on attention, curiosity, and community.
We at Slow Art Day HQ are blown away by how Janean Baird, Pamala Eaton, BN Artists, and their many partners continue to lead the way in growing the Slow Art Day movement. Among other things, they have inspired others around the world to launch citywide events. In 2025, Constanza Ontiveros Valdés — an art writer and cultural project leader in Mexico City – was inspired by BN Artisits to start the first Mexico City citywide. That was so successful that this year, Ontiveros Valdés has built a volunteer team, a website and organized a coalition of 55+ museums, galleries and other venues. Wow! And not to be outdone by his northern neighbor, Mauricio Avila Morales is now organizing the first citywide in Bogotá, Colombia (more on that soon).
Happy Slow Art Day (almost) to everyone around the world. We need more art and community in this divisive, topsy-turvy world – and thanks to many of you we will have that.
Best,
Phyl
P.S. Slow Art Day 2026 is coming up April 11 – register your museum, gallery, church, sculpture park or movie theater for 2026, if you have not yet done so.
The Central Illinois Participating Galleries, Museums, Libraries, Public Art spaces, and Sculpture Parks
410 Sculpture Park — 410 S. Madison St., Bloomington, IL
Large-scale works created from discarded industrial materials. Open daily. Special slow looking + artmaking program on Sunday, April 12 (registration required).
Art Vortex Studio — 101 W. Monroe St., Suite 210, Bloomington, IL
Photography, sculpture, and collage. Open April 3 and April 11.
Beluga Press Art Gallery — 313 N. Main St., Bloomington, IL
Photographic techniques. Open April 3 and April 11.
Bloomington Public Library — 205 E. Olive St., Bloomington, IL
Featured local artists on display. Co-host of April 12 sculpture park program.
City of Lexington — 329 W. Main St., Lexington, IL
Public art installations and Bloom on Main community event.
Herb Eaton Studio & Gallery — 411 N. Center St., Bloomington, IL
Historic Route 66 gallery and closing reception site.
Illinois Art Station — 101 East Vernon Ave., Normal, IL
Free Fourth Saturday artmaking event on April 25.
Inside Out: Accessible Art — 200 W. Monroe St., Bloomington, IL
Artists available to discuss their work.
Jan Brandt Gallery — 418 N. Main St., Bloomington, IL
Circus-themed paintings inspired by local history.
J.Y. Langston Studio & Gallery — 103 W. Monroe St., Bloomington, IL
Open studio and gallery.
Joann Goetzinger Studio Gallery — 313 N. Main St., Bloomington, IL
Group exhibition of regional artists.
Main Gallery 404 — 404 N. Main St., Bloomington, IL
Featured works with slow looking prompts.
Main Street Yoga / Von Champs Boutique — 402 N. Main St., Bloomington, IL
Student exhibition and pop-up programming.
Mandy Roeing Fine Art — 105-A W. Monroe St., Bloomington, IL
Soft pastel landscapes and portraits.
McLean County Arts Center — 601 N. East St., Bloomington, IL
Regional Emerging Artist Exhibition and portrait workshop.
McLean County Museum of History — 200 N. Main St., Bloomington, IL
Exhibition of Robert Cumpston’s metal sculptures.
Normal Public Library — 206 W. College Ave., Normal, IL
“Plant Matter” exhibition exploring nature and community.
Second Presbyterian Church — 404 N. Prairie St., Bloomington, IL
“What’s So Good About Good Friday?” exhibition.
Shake It Up Cocktail Lounge & Eatery — 105 W. Front St., Bloomington, IL
Photography exhibition in a social setting.
The Painted Wraith Curiosity Shoppe — 106 W. Monroe St., Bloomington, IL
Original artwork and Route 66-inspired pieces.
The Pharmacy Gallery & Art Space — 623 E. Adams St., Springfield, IL
Route 66-themed exhibition of drawings and photography.
Threshold to Hope — 200 W. Monroe St., Bloomington, IL
Art offerings and special pricing.
University Galleries of Illinois State University — 11 Uptown Circle, Normal, IL
Sensory-friendly viewing and all-ages artmaking workshop.