herakut, 2016 – image courtesy the artist … 15, 16 april 2017 herakut, 2016 – image courtesy...

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14, 15, 16 apRil 2017 HERAKUT, 2016 – IMAGE COURTESY THE ARTIST

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14, 15, 16 apRil 2017HERAKUT, 2016 – IMAGE COURTESY THE ARTIST

WELCOMEStreet art is without a doubt the most exciting development in visual art for decades: a ‘movement’ that has caught the imagination of the general public, collectors, auction houses and curators the world over.

The 11 artists invited to participate in Nuart Aberdeen are some of the world’s finest exponents of street art, offering a rich and eclectic insight into the breadth and depth of this global phenomenon.

Nuart Aberdeen will not only provide a platform for international street artists but also local and national artists who wish to showcase their work to the world through a series of site-specific paintings, installations, interventions, and temporary exhibitions at venues across the Granite City.

In addition to physical art production, the Nuart Plus program – which consists of film screenings, artist presentations, panel debates, workshops, exhibitions and more – aims to stimulate debate and our collective imagination by challenging entrenched notions of what art is, and more importantly, what it can be. The dates for Nuart Aberdeen may be Friday 14th – Sunday 16th April but, long-term, we hope these artworks will become part of the fabric of the city with Nuart Aberdeen’s legacy echoing long into the future. We’d like to take this opportunity to thank Aberdeen Inspired and Aberdeen City Council for their unwavering support as well as our partners, wall owners, volunteers and all those who have dedicated time and resources to helping us create Nuart Aberdeen. It is only with their enthusiasm and energy that this event has been made possible and we are enormously grateful.

Martyn, James, Marisa, and the team at Nuart Festival

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Aberdeen City Council is proud to support and intrigued to see the inaugural Nuart Aberdeen festival take place in the Granite City, especially as we celebrate Visit Scotland’s year of History, Heritage and Archaeology. Aberdeen is a city that has a unique and diverse arts and cultural community, with many fine local artists and home to the renowned Gray’s School of Art, Peacock Visual Arts and Seventeen. It has been the council’s priority to work with key partners like Aberdeen Inspired to grow and enhance our cultural events and festivals programme and to build a greater platform to showcase and celebrate Aberdeen’s arts and cultural sector.  I am delighted that, as a city, we have developed festivals like SPECTRA, Look Again and the Jazz Festival as well as the Christmas Village which all ensure the city is a vibrant, interesting, and appealing place to live, visit and enjoy all year round. As part of our Event 365 strategy, we have sought to ensure that Aberdeen benefits from the very best events and festivals. As we strengthen our twin city status with Stavanger, hosting Nuart Aberdeen, a UK exclusive, gives the city a great opportunity to showcase what we have to offer. Ingrained within the festival a central focus is to ensure that local residents, artists and businesses can be fully engaged, involved and understand the legacy this creates for Aberdeen. As an international city, we warmly embrace the visiting artists from across the world, and I look forward greatly to seeing the street art that is produced and encourage one and all to visit the city centre on the 14th, 15th and 16th April (Easter Weekend) to enjoy the iconic street art and take part in the many new and exciting Nuart Aberdeen programmes for people of all ages to enjoy. Jenny LaingLeader, Aberdeen City Council and Aberdeen Inspired Board Member

THURSDAY 13 APRILKICK-OFF AT THE ANATOMY ROOMS19:00 – lateThe Anatomy RoomsMarischal CollegeShoe Lane, Aberdeen AB10 1AN

Join us at The Anatomy Rooms as we kick-off our program with a celebration of Aberdeen’s artistic talent and a special ‘stand-up’ show by Nuart Aberdeen artist Julien de Casabianca. Jon Reid of Mood Collapse presents Follow / Unfollow – a group exhibition of projected artworks in TAR’s atmospheric Museum Room. Next door, Gray Square – a collective of students from Grays School of Art – stage a takeover in the Project Room with music and visuals.From 20:00–21:15 join Julien de Casabianca for a “hilarious and poignant” insight into his practice, process, ideas, influences, family and thoughts behind the geopolitics of street art. Including over 200 images illustrating his career as a visual artist, filmmaker and founder of the global participatory art project – Outings Project – de Casabianca has won hearts and minds around the world with this deeply personal trip down memory lane. “Some people cry at every lecture” he proudly proclaims. Test your mettle, meet Nuart Aberdeen’s international guests and discover a wealth of talented local artists at this social evening to mark the beginning of Nuart Aberdeen 2017.(Soft drinks and alcohol served on a donation basis.)

PROGRAM Nuart Plus is an umbrella term for Nuart’s activities outside of actual art production. It consists of an international research program, publications, artist presentations, panel debates, workshops, education programs, film screenings and more. The Plus series aims to explore and present issues surrounding street art practice in all its guises, through both entertaining and educational projects and programs. It features contributions from some of the worlds’ leading street artists alongside academics, authors, researchers, curators, and other cultural-sector professionals who are dedicated to exploring issues surrounding new forms of art and activity in public space. In Scotland’s year of History, Heritage, and Archaeology, the Nuart Plus symposium will explore the role of Street Art and its associated movements in reflecting, contesting and shaping our shared cultural heritage.

All events are free unless otherwise stated.

PHOTO: KRISTINA BORHES

FRIDAY 14 APRILCONFERENCE DAY 1ART & EVERYDAY LIFE: HISTORY, HERITAGE & ARCHAEOLOGY 14:00–17:00Belmont Filmhouse49 Belmont Street, AB10 1JS Nuart Festival is based on the principle that art should be part of people’s everyday lives. Our events provide a platform to amplify artists’ voices whose goal is to offer an alternative and more practical way of engaging with visual art than art institutions can currently offer. Nuart are dedicated to creating new dialogues and narratives between artist and audience in public space, where people can engage freely and on their own terms. In order for this to happen we need places and spaces where new kinds of stories and art forms can emerge. In this context, Graffiti and Street Art – so often portrayed as the seeds of destruction – can be embraced as the creative source of new beginnings.

14:00Welcome and introductionBy James Finucane, Nuart Festival Manager 14:05–14.45The Invisible College — Building Communities of Creative Practice at Kilmahew-St.PetersPresentation by Hayden Lorimer (UK) 15:00–15:50Where Heritage Meets ArtDr Fiona-Jane Brown (UK), Pedro Soares Neves (PT)

16:00–17:00Panel debate: Traces of the Future, Memories of the PastDiscussion led by: Pedro Soares NevesPanel: Hayden Lorimer, Dr Fiona-Jane Brown, and Diogo Machado (PT)

BROOKLYN STREET ART FILM FRIDAY “LIVE”18:00–20:00Belmont Filmhouse49 Belmont Street, AB10 1JS

Join Jaime Rojo and Steven Harrington (Founders of the influential art blog Brooklyn Street Art) as they present their pick of the very best and most recent short films exploring street art and its associated movements.

FIGHT CLUB AKA THE PUB DEBATE:Grandstand murals or small scale interventions?21:30–23:00Underdog1 Union Street, AB11 5BU

For anyone who’s ever been to a conference and felt bored to distraction. For anyone who ever felt too inhibited to put their hand up during a Q&A. For anyone with an opinion about power structures in public space but without a platform to voice them. Fight Club is for you. Inspired by the original Greek Symposia where debates took place fuelled by copious amounts of wine, Nuart introduce a current hot topic in Street Art culture to be debated by two opposing teams made up of artists, academics and industry professionals, all lubricated by alcohol. The audience are invited to participate and settle the score at the end of the discussion by voting for the winner.

Hayden Lorimer, Chair of Cultural Geography at Glasgow University and active participant in public art group NVA

Dr Fiona-Jane Brown, folklorist, educator, storyteller and founder of Hidden Aberdeen Tours

Pedro Soares Neves, researcher, designer, urbanist, and co-founder of the Street & Urban Creativity International Research Topic.

SATURDAY 15 APRILSTREET PRINTING, WITH RAUBDRUCKERIN11:00–15:00 (drop in session)Market Cross, Castlegate

Transform your old clothes with street-inspired graphic designs!

Street Printing is a printmaking workshop that invites you to make unique patterns and designs on clothes, fabrics and paper using manhole covers, grids and other street level surfaces. Hidden features of Castlegate will provide the inspiration for unique urban designs and outfits. Hosted by the Berlin-based art collective Raubdruckerin, every piece is hand printed on-site using eco-friendly ink, water-based and 100% free from petrol. Bring your own items to print on (t-shirts, tote bags, tea towels etc). Just beware that the ink can stain clothing, so wear working clothes or be very cautious when printing!

NUART ABERDEEN PUBLIC OPENING12:00–13:00The Green, AB11 6AD

Bring the family and join the fun at the official opening of Nuart Aberdeen! Witness the unveiling of Herakut’s monumental mural on the façade of Aberdeen Market before embarking on our first guided Street Art tours from 13:00. Local breakdance group Bring It Boys will be performing a ‘Street Art’ inspired routine created especially for the event, music will be provided by up-and-coming talents from Aberdeen, and local radio station Northsound 1 will be on hand to hear your thoughts about the artwork and events. Grab a drink from one of the many local businesses in the area or a snack from Café 52’s legendary barbecue and join the celebrations in Aberdeen’s historic Merchant Quarter!

STREET ART WALKING TOURS13:00–14:15 or 14:00–15:15Departure point: The Green, AB11 6AD

Join Nuart Aberdeen’s guided tours on our opening weekend – before the paint has barely dried on the walls! Learn about the roots of the Street Art movement and take in work from 11 leading international artists from across the spectrum of Street Art. Our guides will take you on a 75-minute walk around Aberdeen city centre that takes in smaller, hidden artworks as well as the talking points behind the larger murals created at this year’s festival.

CONFERENCE DAY 2ART & EVERYDAY LIFE14:00–16:00Belmont Filmhouse49 Belmont Street, AB10 1JS

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14:00Welcome and introductionBy Evan Pricco (Managing Editor, Juxtapoz Magazine) 14:05–14:45DIY Interventions into Public SpaceEvan Pricco in conversation with the artists Nipper (NO), and Robert Montgomery (UK)

15:00–16:00Rights to the CityEvan Pricco in conversation with the artists Jasmin Siddiqui (Herakut/DE), Alice Pasquini (IT), and representatives of the activist-based movement Brandalism (UK)

SAVING BANKSY UK PREMIERE (SCREENING)16:00–18:00Belmont Filmhouse49 Belmont Street, AB10 1JSTickets £10Concession Tickets £8

Saving Banksy is the true story of one misguided art collector’s attempt to save a painting by infamous British street artist Banksy from destruction and the auction block. It asks the question, ‘What would you do if you woke up one morning and found a million dollar Banksy spray-painted on the side of your building?’

LAUNCH PARTY WITH FINE GRAINS RECORDS21:00 – lateCafe Drummond1 Belmont St, AB10 1JR

Join us for a showcase of cutting-edge music to celebrate the opening of Nuart Aberdeen, featuring artists from the roster of Fine Grains Records. From experimental beats to dark futurism via Berlin, The Highlands, Moscow, Santa Domingo and beyond – label mates CAIN, T_A_M and Uraki Riddim will serve up an eclectic evening of genre-bending electronic music. P

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SUNDAY 16 APRILCHALK DON’T CHALK WORKSHOP11:00–15:00 (drop in session)Rooftop Garden, St Nicolas Centre

Chalk Don’t Chalk is a participatory Public Art project where children of all ages will be given the “freedom of the city” to create their own chalk street art pieces, with professional artists on hand to teach and guide children on their designs. Chalk Don’t Chalk encourages the re-imagining and re-purposing of public space in a dynamic, participatory and creative manner. Drawing inspiration from the likes of Picasso to Banksy, Brancussi to Sir Ken Robinson, we hope that children and families will embrace the project wholeheartedly and join in with this celebration of street art in one of it’s purest forms.

EASTER SUNDAY STREET ART HUNT13:00–14:00The Green, AB11 6AD

Join us for a special Easter Sunday Hunt – Street Art edition! Belgian street artist Jaune has been busy hiding his mischievous bin men and women around Aberdeen city centre. Find six hidden artworks by following the ‘hints’ provided and win a special Easter Sunday prize! ‘Hints’ will be revealed on the day via Nuart Aberdeen’s social media channels and available on paper from Café 52 (52 The Green, AB11 6PE). Take a photo of each piece you find as proof and then return to Café 52 to receive your prize!

STREET ART WALKING TOURS13:00–14:15 or 14:00–15:15*Departure point: The Green, AB11 6AD* signed by North East Sensory Services for the deaf

Join Nuart Aberdeen’s guided tours on our opening weekend – before the paint has barely dried on the walls! Learn about the roots of the Street Art movement and take in work from 11 leading international artists from across the spectrum of Street Art. Our guides will take you on a 75-minute walk around Aberdeen city centre that takes in smaller, hidden artworks as well as the talking points behind the larger murals created at this year’s festival.

BEAUTIFUL LOSERS (SCREENING)16:00–18:00Belmont Filmhouse49 Belmont Street, AB10 1JSTickets £10Concession Tickets £8

Beautiful Losers celebrates the spirit behind one of the most influential cultural moments of a generation. In the early 1990’s a loose-knit group of likeminded outsiders found common ground at a little NYC storefront gallery. Rooted in the DIY (do-it-yourself) subcultures of skateboarding, surf, punk, hip hop, and graffiti, they made art that reflected the lifestyles they led. Developing their craft with almost no influence from the “establishment” art world, this group and the subcultures they sprang from have now become a movement that has been transforming pop culture. Starring a selection of artists who are considered leaders within this culture, Beautiful Losers focuses on the telling of personal stories…speaking to themes of what happens when the outside becomes “in” as it explores the creative ethos connecting these artists and today’s youth.

Program is subject to last minute change — please refer to nuartaberdeen.co.uk for up to date details. Early arrival recommended to ensure access.

UK PREMIERE

SaviNg BanKSyNuARt PlUS at Belmont Filmhouse

Three days of film screenings, artist talks and debates shining a light on Street Art and DIY culture.

FRIDAY 14 APRILConference Day 1 Art & Everyday Life – History, Heritage & Archaeology14:00–17:00Free entry

Brooklyn Street Art Film Friday “Live”The very best and most recent short films exploring Street Art and its associated movements.18:00-20:00Free entry

SATURDAY 15 APRILConference Day 2Art & Everyday Life14:00-16:00Free entry

Saving Banksy (UK PREMIERE)Eloquent Vandals (short)16:00–18:00£10 / £8

SUNDAY 16 APRILBeautiful Losers Play by Axel Void (short)16:00–18:00£10 / £8

Tickets:belmontfilmhouse.com

INviSiBlE citieS

“The city, however, does not tell its past, but contains it like the lines of a hand, written in the corners of the streets, the gratings of the windows, the banisters of the steps, the antennae of the lightning rods, the poles of the flags, every segment marked in turn with scratches, indentations, scrolls.” — Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

Each year Nuart proposes, develops and responds to particular themes. These themes are intended as provocations, designed to open up a space for debate and practice. It is testament to Aberdeen Inspired’s genuinely progressive approach to city development that Nuart have been invited not only to entertain and inspire, but to also provoke and challenge.

The last 20 years has seen the global emergence and growing acceptance of a wide range of independent, artist-led urban art practices. Taking their cue from the likes of Graffiti and Skateboarding, these creative actions challenge the authority of “the city”, particularly with regards to how we interact with public space. From the early days of Skateboarding and Graffiti to Urban Gardening, Yarn Bombing, Flash Mobbing, Parkour and Free Running, urban interventions, Street Art and more latterly, the rise of new Muralism, inhabitants of cities across the globe have been appropriating their shared spaces in ever more creative ways. Nuart Festival was established in Stavanger in 2001 as an annual platform to amplify the very best of these new voices and practices. Nuart Aberdeen, a new international platform, is designed to not only present the most interesting and relevant

Street Art of it’s time, but to also activate and inspire an emergent local scene whilst encouraging creative collaborations with twin city Stavanger.

“Appropriating” urban spaces for unintended use is nothing new, though one could say the diversity and scale of current practice is. At the outset, Nuart set itself a simple goal: to support and facilitate the production of as much of this new public art as possible; to participate in shaping the fabric of the city and to promote the idea that cities should be for people, not just for profit.

Ultimately, we would hope the messages of the individual works produced under the Nuart Aberdeen banner add up to more than the sum of its parts, and rather than the festival being regarded as merely an “event”, it should kick-start a re-evaluation of how and who should participate in shaping the city of the future. In a post-oil, sharing economy the largest untapped creative resource is the city’s inhabitants, particularly those independents who are already challenging the status quo or engaged in promoting the cities rich cultural heritage.

Nuart encourages agency and likes to boldly state that the city is as much yours to use as it is anyone else’s. The extraordinary lengths that the authorities used to go to in order to hinder, prevent or close down unsanctioned urban art serves to show the radical potential that these actions truly have. By recognising the value and harnessing the creativity within these grass roots movements, the City has the potential to not only retain

the soul of those areas it intends to develop, but to give a sense of ownership of the city centre - along with a sense of agency - back to its citizens. Aberdeen Inspired have given Nuart the opportunity to engage and collaborate with a truly unique and authentic group of organisations, businesses and individuals who are obviously dedicated to building a more inclusive and creative city. It is this that drives many of the artists we work with.

Building inclusive and creative cities is perhaps one of our greatest challenges. A key part of the puzzle lies right at the heart of our urban areas: in our city streets. Streets are the fundamental public space of every city, whether Union Street, The Green or Belmont Street, they are the lifeblood of social and economic exchange and the cultural equal of any grand museum or institution.

Street Art is, by default, art that belongs to people of the streets, part of the everyday, breaking boundaries and centuries of tradition between art and everyday life. Old industrial buildings, thoroughfares, tunnels and alleyways are increasingly replacing museums and galleries as the ideal forums and exhibition venues for art.

With this in mind, Nuart promotes a simple principle: if you plan cities for cars and traffic, you get cars and traffic. If you plan for people and places, you get people and places. Nobody yet knows what you get if you plan your city streets as a dynamic, ever-changing public art museum, but it’s something that Nuart and Aberdeen are soon to be at the forefront of finding out.

Martyn Reed, Creative Director of Nuart Festival

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HERAKUT (DE)Aberdeen Market, Market Street

JULIEN DE CASABIANCA (FR)East Green

ISAAC CORDAL (ES)Guestrow

ADD FUEL (PT)19 Belmont Street

M-CITY (PL)18 Harriet Street

MARTIN WHATSON (NO)29-31 Queen Street

FINTAN MAGEE (AU)Jopp’s Lane

ROBERT MONTGOMERY (UK)Jopp’s Lane

ALICE PASQUINI (IT)Shiprow

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STREET PRINTINGMarket Cross, Castlegate

CHALK DON’T CHALKRooftop Garden, St Nicolas Centre

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BELMONT FILMHOUSE49 Belmont Street

CAFE DRUMMOND1 Belmont Street

UNDERDOG1 Union Street

CAFE 5252 The Green

CARMELITE HOTELStirling Street

NUART ABERDEEN HUB SPACEUnit 14, The AcademyBelmont Street

THE ANATOMY ROOMSQueen Street

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ADD FUEL (PT)

Add Fuel is a Portugese visual artist and illustrator who reinterprets the language of traditional tile design, in particular the Portuguese ceramic azulejo (glazed tiles). His unique technique and resulting optical illusions encourage the viewer to think about the history and heritage that lies beneath the facades and pavements of our urban environment.

FINTAN MAGEE (AU)

Born in 1985 in Lismore, Australia but of Scottish descent, Fintan Magee is considered one of the world’s leading figurative street artists. Transporting the viewer beyond mundane routines and expectations into a world of unexpected beauty and chaotic balance, his paintings highlight the extraordinary nature of our everyday existence.

ALICE PASQUINI (IT)

Alice Pasquini is a multimedia artist from Rome whose affectionate street art explores the brighter side of human relationships. Pasquini’s art revolves around the topics of femininity and independent women, and encompasses murals, paintings, and illustrations which tell stories about various acts of kindness and love.

HERAKUT (DE)

Jasmin Siddiqui and Falk Lehmann joined forces under the name Herakut in 2004 and both have roots in the graffiti scene. Their creative process, which involves each artist improvising on top of the other, results in heavily stylized, narrative artworks that are both sensual and savage.

ISAAC CORDAL (ES)

Isaac Cordal is a Spanish artist who since 2006 has placed miniature sculptures in public places around the world as part of an on-going series called Cement Eclipses. Embodying the spirit of guerrilla street art, Cordal’s installations capture the absurdity of human existence through the simple act of miniaturization and site-specific placement.

JULIEN DE CASABIANCA (FR)

Julien de Casabianca is a visual artist, filmmaker and founder of the Outings Project – a global participatory art project that embellishes the streets with portraits plucked from classical paintings. His mission is to merge the perceptions of canonical and street art, while punctuating neglected spaces with images of beauty.

THE CRYSTAL SHIP PRESENTS: JAUNE (BE)

Jaune is a stencil artist and urban interventionist whose work is based on the paradox between the visible and the invisible. Sanitation workers (Jaune’s ex-profession) are the protagonists in his humorous installations and paintings, which find these unsung heroes of our everyday lives elevated to the role of mischief-makers in chief.

M-CITY (PL)

M-City is an artist and Lecturer at the Academy of Art in Szczecin, Poland. He is best-known for his large-scale, industrial-themed murals, which involve piecing together hundreds of carefully cut stencils to create a coherent imagined cityscape. An incredibly prolific and methodical painter, he has notched up over 700 pieces to his M-City project alone.

MARTIN WHATSON (NO)

Norwegian born and based artist Martin Whatson first started producing his unique brand of stencil art in 2004. While studying Art and Graphic Design at the Westerdals School of Communication in Oslo he developed a strong interest in graffiti and street art, ultimately combining them to create his distinctive and hugely popular visual style.

ROBERT MONTGOMERY (UK)

Robert Montgomery has been called a vandal, a street artist, a post-Situationist, a punk artist and the “poet’s Banksy”. He is noticeable for bringing a poetic voice to the discourse of text art through his paste-up artworks, murals and light installations. Originally from Scotland, he has exhibited at the 2011 Venice Biennale and 2012 Kochi-Muziris Biennale in India.

CREATE YOUR OWN ‘MISSION DIRECTIVE’ AND BE A PART OF NUART ABERDEEN 2017!

Nipper is inviting artists of all levels to participate in his ‘Mission Directives’ project. Based on the MAKE / TAKE / REPLACE philosophy, the project gives people the opportunity to exchange artwork with others in public space – turning Aberdeen city centre into a giant open air gallery! Paintings, illustrations, collages, drawings, photographs, stencils, watercolours, zines, stickers… all types of artwork are welcome as long as they are no bigger than A5 (14·8cm × 21cm). Sealable, water- proof bags to protect artworks will be available from the Nuart Aberdeen hub space (Unit 14, The Academy) from Saturday 8 April (opening hours: 10:00 – 18:00). Feel free to upload your images to Instagram using the hashtag #missiondirectives to give others a clue to where they can find your work! Visit our website for more details.

NIPPER (NO)

Nipper is a Bergen-based artist whose Mission Directives project focuses on social ideals of sharing, creativity and citizen-led communication in public space. By questioning who has the power and authority to communicate messages and create meaning in our shared spaces, his work becomes part of a broader conversation of social significance.

HERE’S TO ALL THE REBELS!by Jon Reid, Mood Collapse

Aberdeen might not be the first place you think of when it comes to street art yet the signs of an active subculture have always been there: on a doorway emblazoned with tags; a colourful padlock hanging on a fence (probably by local artist Dymagate), or the Francis Vomit stickers which lead you down some interesting side streets. I’ve been lucky to meet a lot of artists who see the streets as a playground to be explored and enjoyed, a new canvas on which to express their ideas and dreams. Street art is a massively diverse subject with many branches that can cover politics, religion, social issues, or just be fun. Aberdeen has played host to some incredibly amusing and thoughtful interventions over the years, like when Craig Barrowman wheeled a giant eye ball down Union Street or the time the world-renowned ‘conceptual’ street artist Brad Downey cut a giant love heart out of a building tarpaulin on King Street. But the small moments can be just as significant: like the Wolf Man & Elki stencils which appeared in the late 90s or the infamous tartan-clad Bag Piper on Jopps Lane - small acts of rebellion which embody a real countercultural spirit and inspired a generation of ‘outsider’ artists. Street art has evolved and changed over the years but its focus is still the same: to bring art into the public realm, good or bad, for everyone to experience. With Nuart coming to Aberdeen we’ll see a new chapter in Aberdeen’s street art history, opening a fresh dialogue about the Art of Rebellion and everything that goes with it.

Here’s to all the rebels!

Jon Reid has been documenting creativity and culture in Aberdeen since he established the Mood Collapse blog in 2008. With a personal mission to connect the dots between artists both new and old; galleries; and events, Jon aims to showcase the real value of art in the Granite City as well as build connections between Aberdeen artists and those further afield.

Join Jon for our Street Art tours departing The Green at 14:00 on Saturday 15th and Sunday 16th April.

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As the £30m transformation of Aberdeen Art Gallery, Cowdray Hall and Remembrance Hall continues, Aberdeen Art Gallery & Museums is delighted to be working with Nuart and Aberdeen Inspired to bring striking images from our collections to the city streets. Pupils from five schools within the regeneration areas in Aberdeen have chosen artworks currently in storage at Aberdeen Treasure Hub as inspiration for the work of Nuart Aberdeen artist Julien de Casabianca.

See the results in Aberdeen city centre from Saturday 15th April!

For all the latest news about the Inspiring Art and Music redevelopment, including details of how you can be part of this ambitious project for Aberdeen by making a donation to the Inspiring Art and Music fundraising campaign, please visit inspiringartandmusic.tumblr.com

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