Long Read

tomsk's frozen walls: a street artist's sleep-deprived sprint

@Emma Hayes3/16/2026blog

i arrived in tomsk by a rattling bus that smelled like diesel and bad decisions, my backpack clanking with spray cans like a guerrilla armory. the air was -6.66°C but felt like -12.97 according to my phone, and humidity at 95% made every breath a little cloud that clung to my scarf. as a street artist, i chase walls that whisper to me, and this frozen siberian outpost was rumored to have some raw concrete canvases. what i hadn't counted on was a cold that could turn a fresh can of paint into a popsicle before i even shook it.

i dropped my stuff at a hostel near the train station and immediately went hunting for a map. the coordinates 56.0833,86.0333 popped up, showing a vast expanse of white. i embedded that map right here for you to see the emptiness:


the city itself is a patchwork of old wooden houses, soviet-era blocks, and frozen riverbanks. i wandered the streets, my boots crunching on snow, trying to find any sign of graffiti. most of it is tiny stickers on lampposts or stencils near the university. i heard whispers of an underground crew called ‘frost wolves’ that only paint when it’s below -20. i scoffed, but kept my eyes peeled for tags that looked sprayed in a blizzard.

the first day, i ducked into a cramped café called *kofein to warm up. hot chocolate was a must. an old man at the next table leaned over and said, ‘if you want real art, go to the alley behind the theater. huge mural of a wolf howling at a satellite.’ i scribbled that down, filed it under ‘maybe’. later i checked the Tomsk subreddit and saw a thread about a secret spot under the ice bridge. locals love spinning yarns for gullible travelers.

i tried to paint on a brick wall near an abandoned factory. the wind was brutal, and my electric blue can froze after five seconds. i had to warm it under my arm, feeling like i was nursing a frozen baby. half the outline of a
polar bear on a skateboard bled into the snow. just as i was about to pack it in, two teenagers stopped. ‘that’s sick! are you from here?’ they asked, and eagerly grabbed a can of neon orange, adding their own tag. that small exchange made the -6.66 degree misery feel worthwhile. i later read on a local forum that teens gather there after school - i’d accidentally tapped into a community.

i checked the weather again: pressure 1034 hpa, unusually high. the forecast promised clear skies but promised nothing about the ‘feels like’ factor. i learned quickly that you can’t trust a weather app that says ‘lightly windy’ when the streets are empty and trees are bending double. on a related note, i noticed my phone flashing two numbers constantly: 1511494 and 1643779858. i have no idea what they meant - maybe a glitch, maybe a secret code for the best spray paint brand. if you figure it out, drop me a line.

i wanted to explore beyond tomsk. a tattooed lady at the market told me: ‘when the creative well runs dry, catch a ride to novosibirsk, about four hours southeast. bigger walls, cooler people.’ i couldn’t afford it, but i scoured the TripAdvisor page for Tomsk and saw complaints about the cold - at least i wasn’t alone. i also peeked at the Tomsk Tourist Board for events; they listed a banya on lenina street as a must-try. ‘just don’t plunge into the ice hole unless you want to die,’ the reviews joked. a Yelp entry for a local pizza joint promised ghost stories at midnight; i was too tired to stay up.

speaking of
banya, that’s the real social hub. you go there, sweat out the cold, and network with everyone from taxi drivers to poets. i tried one on lenina street, and it was an experience: hot stones, birch whisk, and a shock of cold water that felt like being punched by winter. it also helped my muscles after a day of spraying in subzero wind.

if you’re thinking of coming to tomsk for street art, here’s some
hard-earned advice:
-
always carry spare camera batteries; cold drains them in minutes.
-
never trust a weather app that underestimates the wind chill.
-
reconsider bringing aerosol cans if temps drop below -15 - they freeze solid. i heard some artists mix in vodka to lower the freezing point. not sure if that works, but it’s a thing.
-
make* friends with local artists; they’ll show you hidden walls not on any map. i got lucky with those teens.

i left tomsk with half my cans empty, a few social media contacts, and a newfound respect for anyone who creates while their fingers turn blue. it’s not the polished, instagram-ready travel you see in magazines. it’s raw, messy, and oddly rewarding. next time i’ll bring heated gloves, a stronger will, and maybe a bottle of vodka for my spray cans.

i still wonder about those numbers, 1511494 and 1643779858. maybe they’re coordinates for a hidden mural? or just a digital ghost? either way, they’ll stay with me like the memory of that cold.

oh, and here are a few random unsplash shots that sort of capture the mood:


hope this gives you a taste of tomsk’s frozen art scene. if you go, dress warm, keep an eye on those glitchy numbers, and maybe bring a extra can of neon orange. you never know who you’ll meet.


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About the author: Emma Hayes

Exploring the intersection of technology and humanity.

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