Urban legends: The world’s 5 most creative cities

Everyone knows about London, Paris and New York, but what other creative cities are setting the world alight?

Published by Anna Kurkijärvi on September 9, 2012

Einstein once said, “Creativity is contagious. Pass it on.” Maybe that’s why cities are such breeding grounds for creative genius. But not all metropolis are created equal. Take Helsinki, this year’s World Design Capital, and our spiritual home. It has a mere million people, yet it’s bursting with innovative ideas. So, are there other unlikely contenders for the world’s most creative city? You better believe it!

Literary Dublin

All together, now: Joyce, Wilde, Binchy, Stoker, Roddy Doyle, Elizabeth Bowen, Synge, Heaney, Yeats, O’Casey, Beckett, Clare Boylan, Flann O’Brien, Anne Enright, Michael Longley, Eavan Boland, Brendan Behan, Sebastian Barry – and breathe! All these people lived in or wrote about Dublin.

The city, one of UNESCO’s Cities of Literature, has books nailed. There’s also the Dublin Writer’s Museum, the Irish Writers’ Centre (which runs creative writing classes if you’ve caught the story bug) and fantastic bookshops everywhere. But if you can’t visit, just crack open Joyce’s Ulysses – it’s as much of a map of the city as anything you’ll get from the Ordnance Survey.

Artistic LA

Forget about your starlets, hunks and closed sets – LA is also home to a staggeringly vibrant art community. In one downtown area alone, Gallery Row, there’s no fewer than thirty-three galleries and fifteen museums, as well as an excellent selection of public art and, count them, thirteen theatres.

It’s been home to a cohort of modern artists like James Turrell and Mike Kelley, and art festivals and fairs like Art Los Angeles Contemporary and the LA Art Show keep reeling in the fans and collectors. Throw in the Downtown Art Walk, and, just like at the movies, you’re guaranteed never to be bored.

Festive Edinburgh

We reckon the Scottish capital is the Grandmaster of sheer, unadulterated culture. Proof? The Edinburgh Festival. This isn’t just one festival – it’s actually a whole bunch of unrelated, near-concurrent events that together form the largest cultural shindig in the world.

There’s the International Festival, the Fringe, the Film Festival, the Jazz and Blues Festival, the Military Tattoo (think army, not needles), the Book Festival, the Mela, the Comedy, Art, Swing, Harvest, Politics, Science, and Storytelling Festivals, and a whole fistful more. It doesn’t get more creative (or exhausting!) than this. 

Classical Vienna

Pop and rock? Mere upstarts! Vienna is to classical music what Nashville is to country. Maestros Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Johann Strauss Jr all worked there, and Schubert, Schoenberg, and Johann Strauss Sr were born there, too.

Vienna’s annual concert schedule includes over 15,000 events in venues ranging from the Vienna Musikverein and the art nouveau Vienna Konzerthaus, to tiny concert cafes where you can listen to live music while drinking your Viennese coffee. Lovely!

Street arty Sao Paulo

From the old to the new: the walls of Sao Paulo are covered with some of the most vibrant graffiti in the world. The Brazilian government calls it visual pollution, but they can’t eradicate it.

One group of street artists, called Pixadores, say their work is about revolt and defiance – they use gothic lettering, black paint and heavy metal influences. Another duo, 6EMEIA, painted over 50 of the inner city’s storm drains with large, colourful images. Grass-roots creativity at its finest! 

That’s our five. We think they’re pretty hard to beat. Needless to say, if you think there are more deserving candidates, we’re all ears.

Image credit: Alex E. Proimos

Comments

  • http://twitter.com/AlexEfimoff Alex Efimoff

    But how do you measure creativity? By visiting websites?

  • http://twitter.com/digistar Tim Gorree

    @twitter-508327773:disqus At least part of the answers are in the documentary behind the first link. Make sure to turn on the subtitles!

    • http://twitter.com/AlexEfimoff Alex Efimoff

      Well, it doesn’t look like it’s a doco to me ;) Perhaps, when the festival has only begun it was a creative venture. These days it’s another commercial music event, at least it looks like that while watching the video.
      A term “creative city’ has it’s own meaning and it’s broader and wider than the things described in the article.
      Go to Wikipedia and search for ‘Creative city’, there is an article on it.
      Also, I believe ‘Creativity’ is quite a subjective thing to refer to, in general.

      • Anna kurkijarvi

        I went to the very first Flow Festival and it really wasn’t in anyway commercial then. These days they have bigger bands, so it costs more. Yet I still think it’s kept close to its roots.

        As for measuring creativity, I totally agree Alex. It’s like trying to measure imagination. I based these on vibe, actual output of things created and how dedicated towards creativity the city was.

        Of course, I was trying to be a bit provocative, too :)

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/YZ5PG6AKSB46LER2XJYADDW7DE Keith L

    I don’t know how LA made this list. Virtually every city in France would blow it out the park when it comes to art and New York would be well ahead of it also. Also not one French city–bizarre.

    • Lotte26

      Really are you serious? even if ou ignore the huge art scene there how can you ignore Hollywood? it is more than a 100 years old and surely a huge centre of creation, no? Other than paris where in France can challange?

      • http://profile.yahoo.com/YZ5PG6AKSB46LER2XJYADDW7DE Keith L

        I wasn’t considering Hollywood though there is some creativity involved of course but it’s far more about business, massive budgets, contrived effects etc than creativity—though I do enjoy its output.

        Of course Paris is the biggie and to me it is in a league of its own when it comes to creativity. But France is art from one corner of the country to the next. I would say every city, town and village is just more creative than North America and the body of classic paintings that has been produced there is astonishing. Obviously I’m not into modern art so it’s subject of course.

  • http://www.facebook.com/Jixieblood Jade Ivy Cartwright

    What about Tokyo?

    • Anna kurkijarvi

      I’m told Tokyo is amazing, Jade, and I’d definitely consider it for a longer list. What makes you think it should be a contender?

  • Jean Noël Tribolo

    Difficult to say if these cities are the first 5. A lot of other ones would merit to be cited when it comes to creation: Dubai, Milano, Paris, Barcelona…