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.
