Best new spot for your Super Bowl selfie? Sike Style, Tom’s Town run it back for fan-friendly Chiefs mural

January 25, 2021  |  Austin Barnes

Phil "Sike Style" Shafer, Tom's Town mural

A wall of red painted in the shadow of downtown is expected to serve as more than a backdrop for Kansas City Chiefs-inspired selfies, as the world champion football team heads back to the Super Bowl. 

Steve Revare, Tom's Town

Steve Revare, Tom’s Town

“We hope that rallying around the Chiefs becomes a little point of pride for everybody and motivation to get people out of the house,” explained Steve Revare, co-owner of Crossroads-poured Tom’s Town Distilling Co. — now home to the 1,600-square-foot mural, painted by Phil Shafer, better known as Sike Style. 

“Sike Style Industries has been working with the Chiefs for almost three years,” explained Shafer, specifically noting a mural he previously painted for the team at Westport Ale House in 2020. “After the success of last season, the Chiefs wanted to give the fans an even bigger, showstopper mural in conjunction with the ‘Run it Back’ playoff campaign.”

Click here to connect with Shafer or his online portfolio. 

While the previous mural focused heavily on the Chiefs star quarterback Patrick Mahomes, Shafer’s newest piece — on prominent display as passersby travel north on Main Street — plays up a different set of the team’s heavy hitters. 

Phil "Sike Style" Shafer, Tom's Town mural

Phil “Sike Style” Shafer, Tom’s Town mural

“There’s Tyreek [Hill] throwing up the deuces as he speeds by and [Travis] Kelce catching some air as he dunks over the end zone goal post,” he said. 

“I work directly with the Chiefs marketing team to find the best player poses that will fit the space and make the best photo ops for the fans and tell a story about the players.”

With an artist secured, the team set its sights on finding the ideal visual real estate to house a massive art piece, added Revare. 

“It was sort of a perfect storm. We offered a large brick wall and a Kansas City brand name,” he said of the Tom’s Town building. 

The piece came together at a rapid pace over a couple weeks at the end of December, Shafer added.

“Painting something 40 feet-by-40 feet — in the winter, with a two-week window [of completion] between Christmas and New Year’s was a bit tricky, but we got lucky with a few nice-weather days,” he recalled, noting he couldn’t have finished the project without out help from fellow artist and teammate, John Raux. 

Such collaborative energy supports the overall vibe both Shafer and Revare hope the project brings to Kansas Citians as they look to celebrate another trip to the Super Bowl and begin to reconnect after a year of heavy isolation, they said. 

“Kansas City has been amazing to us. Our customers supported us through the pandemic: they bought hand sanitizer from us and they bought our bottled cocktails, then, when it was safe to come back … they did. I really feel like this is a way to just say, ‘Hey, Kansas City, we’re with you and we’re all together,” Revare said. 

Click here to take advantage of Tom’s Town curbside menu or for details on indoor drinking and special events. 

Tom's Town mural

Tom’s Town mural

The mural’s outdoor location gives fans the opportunity to engage in the same hype-building experiences they came to enjoy last season, while maintaining social distancing practices, noted Shafer. 

“The Chiefs Kingdom mural does bring Chiefs fans together … there’s plenty of room in the Tom’s Town parking lot to snap a pic — don’t forget to tag @SikesStyle and #RunItBack and #ChiefsKingdom,” he said.

Click here to check out 21+ ways to wear your Kansas City Chiefs pride while shopping local. 

In addition to an influx of fans at Tom’s Town (and likes and shares on Shafer’s social media pages), the collaboration has brought new creative energy to the distilling company — set to unveil a line of Chiefs-inspired, bottled cocktails — and further influenced one of Shafer’s long-held, post-painting traditions. 

“With most of my public murals, I leave, ‘art cans,’ by the wall for fans to collect,” he explained of the practice that’s become a bit of a thrill for diehard fans of his work. 

“I take the digital version of the mural design and wrap my empty spray cans that I used to paint the wall. It’s a good way to upcycle the old spray cans and give them new life as art objects that commemorate the mural.”

Doing so helps Shafer connect his digital brand with Kansas Citians who might have only shown up because of their place in Chiefs Kingdom, he added.

This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2021 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Topeka approves $5.9M for innovation campus, locking in key funding for animal health, ag hub

        By Tommy Felts | May 14, 2021

        Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. Plans…

        World War II veteran experiencing a virtual Honor Flight using Healium and T-Mobile technologies

        Healium partners with T-Mobile, transporting veterans to DC memorials via virtual Honor Flight

        By Tommy Felts | May 12, 2021

        Veterans living in rural America can experience the sights and sounds of the nation’s war memorials in Washington D.C. thanks to a Kansas City-area startup’s virtual reality technology, powered by T‑Mobile 5G. “We are losing our World War II veterans at a rate of hundreds a day, and sadly many may not live long enough…

        Jonathan O’Neil Cole, Pendulum Studio, and Tim Bowman, Compass Resources, Troost Village Development

        Watch: Troost Village duo go behind the scenes of four-year development in historic East KC neighborhood 

        By Tommy Felts | May 11, 2021

        Editor’s note: The following story includes the first video in a four-part series taking a look under the hard hats at the Troost Village development, a $162 million project on Troost Avenue, the city’s longtime racial dividing line. Videos in this series are expected to debut on Startland News as the project unfolds. The finished…

        KC’s long-running online indie music magazine just debuted in print; why its founder saved advertising for the black-and-white page

        By Tommy Felts | May 11, 2021

        Flashy digital ads and gimmicky marketing schemes aren’t telling the stories (or singing the praises) of artists who run counter to Kansas City’s mainstream, said Aaron Rhodes, founder of a niche music magazine newly hitting the streets this spring. Readers shouldn’t be fooled, Rhodes said. His underground approach to ad sales for Shuttlecock Music Magazine…