“For big street art cities like Stavanger, history has been painted onto the walls,” Mr. Reid said. “For Aberdeen, it’s a new history that’s being written right now.”
Street art in Aberdeen, at least the kind sanctioned by the city, only really took off in the last few years. That is thanks, in part, to Jon Reid’s partner, the painter Mary Louise Butterworth who was one of the coordinators of the Painted Doors project, started in 2016, which transformed the drab doors of the city’s warehouses and office buildings into works of art.
Other Aberdeen spots I loved:
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There are plenty of whisky distilleries within driving distance of Aberdeen, each offering tours and tastings. But for a primer head to The Grill, a 150-year-old pub that has a selection of 600 — yes, six hundred — Scottish whiskies. A drink list like that can be intimidating, but the people behind the bar were more than happy to walk me through my options. Talk to them long enough and they’ll also regale you with stories from the bar’s past — like the time in 1973 when women attending a trade union conference across the street stormed the bar, which at that point served only men, demanding to be served. (Two years later it began officially serving women.)
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The best meal I had in Aberdeen was at Moonfish Cafe, where the seasonally rotating menu is built on locally sourced beef and seafood. Despite the level of culinary innovation and beautiful presentation, prices are very reasonable, likely a product of the city’s widespread disdain for over-the-top pomposity.
But it’s not just public art that betrays Aberdeen’s gray, industrial reputation. Through Mr. Reid and Ms. Butterworth, I met other creatives who are quietly working to change the city. I visited the Nigerian-born artist Ade Adesina, whose massive linocut prints juxtapose Edenic natural scenes with the heavy footprint of industries like Aberdeen’s own offshore oil rigs. When I met him, he was in the midst of preparing for an exhibition in Edinburgh, a logistical nightmare when it comes to transporting such big pieces. When I asked why he didn’t just move down there, a place famous for its arts scene, his answer was simple.
“There are no distractions here,” he said. “I can’t have people constantly knocking on my door when I’m trying to work.”
Mr. Adesina does his printing at Peacock Visual Arts, hidden down a narrow lane. The nonprofit printmaking studio works with luminaries like Ralph Steadman and university students alike. It didn’t take me long to realize that though Aberdeen’s art community is small, any inferiority complex brought about by the lack of attention it gets compared to bigger Scottish cities is outweighed by the solidarity and sense of community felt by its artists.