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New diversity mural boosts northeast Calgary's public art inventory

A new mural designed and painted by a group of local youth is now on display in northeast Calgary.

Colourful artwork at the Genesis Centre painted by local youth

Planning for a mural at the Genesis Centre started in 2019, but COVID put the project on hold. The finished piece is now on display. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

A new mural designed and painted by a group of local youth is now on display in northeast Calgary.

The group, working with Antyx Community Arts, turned a plain wall in the Genesis Centre in Martindale into a colourful message celebrating diversity.

"We talked about what kinds of community and social issues the youth were interested in, and what ended up coming out of that was diversity," said Noor Sayadi, a program facilitator with Antyx Community Arts.

The mural includes themes like Black Lives Matter and nonbinary genders. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

"We live in concrete boxes, so a big part of this is reinserting the life and passion and personality and culture back into these spaces with work about the community, for the community and by the community," said Sayadi.

The group spent months planning the mural before incorporating all their ideas into one final design.

"The youth get the opportunity to use materials and be engaged in doing a large scale project. Youth are not well trusted because they're young and they get pushed aside, but at Antyx, we trust them," she said.

Sayadi says being trusted leaves the youth feeling more empowered. She says their confidence grows and they end up forging friendships among their group.

The young artists pictured with the finished mural. They say they forged friendships during the process, which helped them forget about the pandemic for a while. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

"I got an amazing experience to work with friends and new people and got to see the community engaged and others enjoy it," said one of the members, Noor Bata.

The group hopes the work inspires others.

"Other people might be surprised, thinking, 'I wonder how they did this,'" said Marcus Dreger.

"Especially duringCOVID, we rarely got to go out and share an experience," said Warda Durrani. "So this was relieving after all the online meetings and stuff."

The mural is designed to capture northeast Calgarys diversity across religions and cultures. It includes some First Nations imagery. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

Work was supposed start in March 2020, but the pandemic put the project on hold.

"We actually bought the paint but then put it away in storage," saidSayadi.

"Thankfully, this year we were able to come back."

You can see the mural on the upper floor of the Genesis Centre's gymnasiums.