Silk paintings at the Palm House
Hundikuu aednik
Silk Paintings from Two Centuries
Lylian Meister:
The title of my exhibition, Hundikuu aednik, translates directly as The Gardener of the Wolf Month. In Estonian tradition, Hundikuu refers to both January and February.
I feel that my exhibition does not require explanation, but presence. I have enjoyed every moment of painting on silk — both many decades ago and today. Smooth and lustrous, the fabric absorbs colour, light, and mood; it allows itself to be touched by the brush and submits to thought and intention. Whether this is an encounter with beauty or an expression of silky, sybaritic longing for luxury is for the viewer to decide. For me, these silks are large, airy watercolours, upon which flow and drift the lifetime gardens of the Gardener of the Wolf Moon — unreal, dreamlike, melted into silk.
I began to love silk as a young artist working with author’s editions, designing fabrics at the ARS textile studio. I have held several silk painting exhibitions in Tallinn, Finland, Sweden, Norway, and London. My silk works are included in the art collection of the city of Alta (Norway) as well as in numerous private collections in different countries.
Alongside the silk paintings, the exhibition also presents two printed textile self-portraits. Present are Phoenix, born last year, and Worldview. Tuesday., shed from the previous century. In the end, all of this is me — as a textile artist, I work with a wide range of materials and techniques, the more complex of which I once mastered at an imperial-era university.
A large part of this exhibition has come to me as a gift from the Tallinn Botanic Garden itself: all this greenery and plant life in the snowy winter, protected through the two Estonian Wolf Moon months by a glass palace, cared for by gardeners, alive. Planta sapiens. What more meaningful exhibition space could there be for a painting gardener and a romantic… thank you.
I extend my heartfelt thanks to Urve Sinijärv and Jaan Mettik (Tallinn Botanic Garden) for their trust and this wonderful exhibition opportunity; to Piret Valk and Kadi Kibbermann (Estonian Academy of Arts) for their help with the installation; to John Fail (Perfect Lives) for the brilliant studio space; and, of course, to my husband Volli Lainoja for his love and invaluable support.
Orchids 2026
From 27 February to 8 March 2026, the traditional orchid […]

Happy holidays!
Dear friends! Tallinna Botanic Garden is closed on the 24th-26th […]

Tallinn Botanic Garden’s 64th anniversary
In honor of the 64th anniversary of the Tallinn Botanic […]

Textile installations at the Palm House
From 21 November to 4 January, the Palm House of […]

Exhibition “Flavours of the World”, 18–26.10.2025
At the Tallinn Botanic Garden exhibition “Flavours of the World”, […]

The Palm House closed for maintenance until 10th of October
The Palm House, including all the greenhouses and the cafe […]

Copies of Konrad Mägi’s paintings at the Palm House, 30.09–16.11.2025
Until November 16, 2025, the group of copyists “Kunstikoobas” is […]

New opening hours at Tallinn Botanic Garden from October 1
Starting October 1, the Tallinn Botanic Garden will transition to […]

Chillies and tomatoes, 06.-14.09.2025
From September 6 to 14, 2025, the Tallinn Botanic Garden […]

Clematis and Grapevines, 15.17.08.2025
From August 15 to 17, 2025, a clematis and grapevine […]

