Tough Chiefs loss propels Kansas City artist to launch winning business
September 10, 2024 | Mike Sherry
Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by AltCap, an ally to underestimated entrepreneurs that offers financing to businesses and communities that traditional lenders do not serve.
The Kansas City Chiefs came up one win short of entering the Super Bowl when they lost by a field goal to the Cincinnati Bengals in January 2022.
But Kansas City, Missouri, artist Deante Howard won big even before the initial coin toss at Arrowhead Stadium.
Selling prints of his works featuring Chiefs and Bengals stars to tailgaters, Howard earned as much in a few hours as he would have made in a month in the health insurance sales job he had lost in a layoff several months prior.
When he returned home and informed his wife he was done submitting job applications to focus on making art his business, she dropped her initial skepticism when Howard told her he had sold all 25 of his prints and cleared $3,000 at the game.
Textbooks might call Howard’s art abstract expressionism mixed with realism. But he termed his style “elevated graffiti,” with broad, colorful strokes and shapes enveloping figures like the late Derrick Thomas, a Hall of Fame linebacker with the Chiefs.
“I feel like that’s a lot of how life is like,” Howard said. “Life can definitely surround you with chaos. You can look at the chaos or you can choose to focus on the important things and find beauty in that.”
A 35-year-old father of five, Howard is the product of a single-parent household on Kansas City’s east side. Living amidst gangs did not provide Howard with any role models to give life to his dream of turning his love of art into a career.
It was not until that Bengals-Chiefs championship game that it seemed art could be anything more than a side hustle. “I knew this could be it,” Howard said.
The expense of establishing himself as a professional artist, however, nearly scuttled his plans. That is until he learned about AltCap through AI Hub, an arts incubator in the River Market.
ICYMI: AI Hub’s art incubator is leaving River Market, taking over top floor of renovated PHKC space
AltCap’s ARTcap loan for creative entrepreneurs helped Howard purchase a display tent for art shows and equipment. He no longer works on his floor because he bought an easel, and he has used AltCap funding to pay the various fees required to enter and display at art fairs.

Deante Howard paints a piece using materials made possible by AltCap’s ARTcap loan for creative entrepreneurs; photo by Bobby Burch, AltCap
The AltCap funds also allowed Howard to purchase the special packaging collectors expect when they buy his sports cards. Howard has produced 6,000 trading-card-sized works featuring 30 athletes, and he will earn a $24,000 profit when he sells all of them.
In his other creative business, Howard designs and sells custom hoodies, jackets, shoes, and more via his Etsy store, Stacs on Deck. Featuring vibrant colors and eye-catching designs, Stacs on Deck has sold hundreds of custom clothing pieces around the world.
As most Kansas Citians know, the Chiefs rebounded from losing to the Bengals by winning back-to-back NFL championships. In football terms, Howard said his art business has taken him to the playoffs, and the Super Bowl is in his sights.
“I don’t believe I fail until I quit, and I don’t quit,” he said. “It will happen. It is just a matter of when.”
Featured Business

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KC-based OYO Fitness closes a historically successful Kickstarter
To say that OYO Fitness has a successful Kickstarter campaign would be an understatement. The Kansas City-based fitness firm folded up and then crushed its recent crowdfunding effort, which raised a stunning $659,000 for its collapsible and compact exercise device. OYO’s DoubleFlex Black campaign — which snagged pre-orders from 4,200 backers — was the second…
Survivor, innovator Kim Gandy rewards patients for sticking to treatments
In her 20 years working as a transplantation clinician, Kim Gandy found it baffling that a seemingly simple problem had such a difficult time finding a solution. Transplant patients consistently struggled to adhere to their health regimens, resulting not only in significant costs for care providers but also death. “We were literally losing patients,” Gandy…
Kansas City to host national student entrepreneur competition
Kansas City will soon host a national competition for student entrepreneurs. Set for March 6 and 7 at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards will bring its top 25 national finalists to Kansas City. To qualify, student entrepreneurs must be the primary operator of a business less than six years old…
Area experts dive into uncertainty and hope for immigrant entrepreneurship
Now more than ever, it’s important for the community to come together to gain new perspectives. That notion was a driving force behind the February Innovation Exchange in which Startland News dove into the subject of immigration and entrepreneurship. Hosted in partnership with Think Big, the event welcomed a researcher and a policy expert from…

