With cats, a dog and vivid, geometric shapes, Old Strathcona mural is making a big impact - Action News
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Edmonton

With cats, a dog and vivid, geometric shapes, Old Strathcona mural is making a big impact

It's big, it's bright and the grassroots-funded piece of public art has already captured the fancy of many Edmontonians.

'You just have to look at the mural to understand why we picked him,' says co-organizer of campaign

'It's just really going to brighten up the area'

6 years ago
Duration 1:47
A mural designed by renowned street artist Okuda San Miguel is adding colour to Edmonton's Old Strathcona neighbourood.

It's big, it's bright and it has captured the fancy of many Edmontonians.

On the north wall of the Crawford Block, a new apartment building just off Whyte Avenue, is a colourful mural. The grassroots-funded piece of public art features a human body with a dog head in vivid colours and geometric shapes.

Spanish artist Okuda San Miguel has been painting the six-storey mural near the El Cortez restaurant in Old Strathcona since Saturday.

The plan was to complete it on Wednesday, but reports on social media Monday night said the mural was completed at about 10 p.m.

a mural
Spanish artist Okuda San Miguel, along with his assistants, started work painting this mural on July 14. (CBC)

He was commissioned to do the large-scale public artwork after Edmonton's Michael Maxxis and Fish Griwkowsky were able to raise more than $120,000 for the mural to be painted.

"You just have to look at the mural to understandwhy we picked him," said Griwkowsky.

San Miguel is known for his colourful work around the world, including a mural recently painted in Toronto.

He said he was inspired by Alberta's landscapes and historical artwork for the Edmonton mural.

"I want to go back to ancestral Indigenous artworks where they mix animals and humans because they were so close to the animals in spirituality," he said.

Michael Maxxis and Fish Griwkowsky raised more than $120,000 for a mural to be painted by Okuda San Miguel on the north wall of the Crawford Block. (CBC)

Maxxis, who is one of the co-owners of El Cortez, hopes this mural inspires other art projects in Edmonton.

"We just thought it was a great complement to the area and something that can kick-start more projects like this in the area and the city," he said.