Latitude: 57.1492 / 57°8'57"N
Longitude: -2.0978 / 2°5'52"W
OS Eastings: 394180
OS Northings: 806488
OS Grid: NJ941064
Mapcode National: GBR SCH.GW
Mapcode Global: WH9QQ.RK7P
Plus Code: 9C9V4WX2+MV
Entry Name: Aberdeen University Students' Union, 11 Gallowgate, Aberdeen
Listing Name: 2 and 4 Upperkirkgate and 11 Gallowgate, Former Students Union
Listing Date: 17 May 1996
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 389843
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB43377
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200389843
Location: Aberdeen
County: Aberdeen
Town: Aberdeen
Electoral Ward: George St/Harbour
Traditional County: Aberdeenshire
Tagged with: University building
Polished granite ashlar with finely tooled dressings. Regular fenestration with chamfered cill courses and string course between 1st and 2nd floor; continuous basket-arched plate glass shop windows at ground. Main entrance at canted SE corner flanked by bipartite ogee-arched windows; canted oriel windows to upper floors; glazed octagonal turret to attic with domed copper roof; stylised machiolated parapet with terminal gablets; gabled ashlar wallhead dormers with exaggerated finials.
8-bay to Upperkirkgate elevation: centre right bay with pierced consoled balcony at 2nd floor; 3-bay wallhead attic storey supporting gabled viewing balcony with finial and ogee roofed octagonal turrets. Symmetrical 11-bay to Gallowgate elevation: canted oriel window to centre bay, as at corner, flanked by dormers.
Timber sash and case plate glass windows. Mansard roof, grey slates; ashlar coped skews; ashlar stacks.
INTERIOR: Sivell's Bar with shallow barrel-vaulted ceiling and proscenium arched stage with geometric mid-20th century railings. Bar contains fine series of murals (see Statement of Special Interest).
Historical background
The interior behind the 19th century facades on Upperkirkgate and Gallowgate was substantially re-developed in the 1930s. The building was internally reorganised by architect James B Nicol to accommodate the University of Aberdeen Student Union, and its circulation was reoriented to address a new three storey addition to the rear. The top floor of the addition contained a hall with a stage. In 1938, students commissioned Robert Sivell to paint murals on three walls of the hall, subsequently renamed the Sivell Bar. They were executed between 1939 and 1954, interrupted by the Second World War, and comprise eleven panels painted in oil on plaster. After the gradual relocation of student union functions to Kings College in Old Aberdeen in the early 2000s, the building was sold several times and finally acquired by the owners of the adjacent shopping centre. Parts of the building are currently used as retail space and parts have been converted to flatted accommodation. The bar is currently out of use (2024).
The former Aberdeen University Student Union building occupies a particularly prominent corner location at the bottom of Upperkirkgate with sight lines down the length of Broad Street to Castlehill. The building is finely detailed with machicolation, ogee-arched windows and octagonal turret. The continuous shopfronts to ground floor are relatively unaltered, helping to anchor the building to its corner site.
The bar contains a series of particularly interesting murals by Robert Sivell. Sivell was born in Paisley in 1888, and studied at the Glasgow School of Art as well as in Paris and Florence, and also worked as an engineer in Canada and America. In 1919 he helped found the Glasgow Society of Painters and Sculptors. He was a renowned and committed figurative painter. The murals were begun in 1938 and completed in 1954 and cover over 1,300 square feet. During this time, he was Head of the Painting Department at Gray's School of Art in Aberdeen. He was helped by two of his former pupils, Alberto Morocco (also a renowned mural painter) and Gordon S. Cameron. The panels depict the journey of life, from Creation to Death, including one illustrating the Blitz. The Pastoral panel on the E wall includes portraits of Sivell himself (or at least his back), and his wife and daughter. Sivell retired from the School the following year in 1954. The distinguished Scottish portrait artist and director of the Glasgow School of Art, Sir William O Hutchison, described the work as 'the greatest mural painting carried out in Scotland during this century, and perhaps any other, and one must express the hope that it will be preserved'. The City of Aberdeen Art Gallery hold formative cartoons for the project, as well as some scaled down replicas of the completed paintings.
The murals are currently (2024) faced in protective eltoline tissue which was applied by painting conservator Brian McLaughlin BA(Hons) MA ACR in 2007.
Supplementary information in the listed building record was updated in 2024.
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
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