A wide shot at the Tampa Bay Buccaneers training facility. In the foreground, two people pose on a 3D street art painting that creates the illusion of a giant hand lifting a football out of the pavement. The base of the mural features the Buccaneers logo and the number 50. In the background, a large white building features "GO BUCS" in red lettering and several team flags.
Laura Thomas (R) stands atop her completed 3D chalk mural at the AdventHealth Training Center in Tampa, Florida. Credit: Laura Thomas c/o Tampa Bay Arts Passport

In Tampa, we build pirate ships inside football stadiums.

So commissioning a giant, hyper-detailed chalk mural for Black History Month at Tampa Bay Buccaneers headquarters? Honestly. On brand.

But what makes this one interesting isnโ€™t just that it exists. Itโ€™s who made it โ€” and how intentionally she approached it.

When Laura Thomas got the call, it wasnโ€™t vague. The organization wanted something that honored Black History Month, incorporated football, and reflected the Tampa Bay community.

No pressure. Just identity, history, civic pride โ€” and maybe donโ€™t smudge it.

โ€œItโ€™s for Black History Month, but I wanted it to be something that would helpโ€ฆ kind of make everybody proud,โ€ Thomas said. โ€œYou know, everyone can enjoy it. Appreciate it.โ€

That line feels particularly Tampa. This is a city that contains multigenerational Black neighborhoods, shiny new condos, die-hard Bucs fans, and people who still argue about which Cuban sandwich is correct. If youโ€™re going to make a piece that lives at One Buccaneer Place, it has to speak to more than one audience.

Thomas understood that assignment.

โ€œThe organization reached out to me, wanting to do this for Black History Month,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd I was very excited and honored that they asked me to do it.โ€

Excited. Honored. Also: strategic.

She didnโ€™t just sketch one idea and hope for the best. She created multiple designs and submitted them. The team chose their final draft pick.

โ€œIโ€™m super glad that they did,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd I think itโ€™s a fun piece and people are going to really enjoy it.โ€

Fun is doing a lot of work here. Because letโ€™s be real: conversations about race in America are rarely described as โ€œfun.โ€ But Tampaโ€™s cultural language has always leaned toward spectacle โ€” Gasparilla beads, boat parades, cannon blasts, oversized pirate flags. If youโ€™re going to make an impact in this town, subtle isnโ€™t always the move.

Chalk art is inherently theatrical. It demands attention. It creates illusion. It makes people stop mid-scroll and mid-stride.

And it disappears.

โ€œI always want to have the most meaning or impact for whatever the event or theme is,โ€ Thomas said. โ€œI always want to do my best with it, and always knowing that when itโ€™s done, itโ€™ll eventually be gone.โ€

Thereโ€™s something very Tampa about that too. This is a city constantly reinventing itself. Buildings come down. Murals rotate. Neighborhoods shift. We memorialize in public โ€” and then we build over it.

Thomas knows the clock is built into her medium.

โ€œI hope they will forever be in awe of it, and obviously take many photos so they can look back and enjoy it,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd I hope itโ€™s something that they feel proud that they had here, and had created and had done.โ€

That phrasing stands out: had created and had done. Not just โ€œdisplayed.โ€ Not just โ€œposted.โ€ Created. Done.

Sports franchises are some of the most powerful cultural brands in the city. When they choose to commission a local artist to interpret Black history on their own property โ€” not tucked into a social media tile, not relegated to a halftime announcement โ€” thatโ€™s a decision about visibility.

It says this story belongs here.

At a training facility where million-dollar contracts are negotiated and Sunday lineups are built, chalk dust might feel small. But culture rarely changes because of one massive gesture. It shifts through visible, repeated choices.

And in a city that loves its cannons loud and its visuals bold, sometimes the most radical thing is simple: make something beautiful. Put it in the open. Let people stand in front of it.

Take the photo.

Let it fade.

And remember that it was here.


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Avery Anderson is the founder of Tampa Bay Arts Passport and Story Keepers theater company.