
Acrylic on canvas
24”x 16” (25”x 17” framed)
The nail that sticks out gets hammered down.
You are free to speak and it is beneficial to speak truth —
but speaking uncompromising truth does not save you from persecution.
—
This painting was born out of a struggle many know but rarely voice: the dissonance between the promise of open dialogue and the punishment that often follows honest expression. It reflects the moments when you're told, "You can speak freely," only to be met with criticism, gaslighting, or subtle forms of dismissal. It's about the pressure to self-censor—the fear that being honest, truly honest, might cost you your reputation, your community, or even your safety.
The arrow in the speaker's chest is not just a symbol of violence; it's the consequence of truth-telling. It echoes the proverb: The nail that sticks out gets hammered down. In a world that claims to value authenticity, the one who dares to break silence often becomes the one most painfully struck.
Each figure embodies a different aspect of this inner tension. The bound mouths suggest restraint, fear, and perhaps even self-protection. Their silence is not merely imposed—it may be chosen out of necessity. The unbound speaker stands in contrast: bold, vulnerable, possibly defiant. He represents the moment of risk—the threshold we all face when deciding whether or not to speak up. When conviction clashes with cost.
Feel Free to Speak does not offer resolution. Instead, it holds space for reflection: When have you felt this tension? What have you self censored to keep the peace? What is the price of silence? What is the cost of truth?
Though the image is somber, it is not without hope. The arrow pierces, yes—but in doing so, it also exposes. In wounding the speaker, it reveals what is at stake. And sometimes, it is in the wound that we begin to understand the value of our voice.
This work is both a lament and a quiet protest. A reminder that while the world may say, “Feel free to speak,” the truth often comes at a price. Still, in the speaking—in the willingness to be misunderstood, opposed, or wounded—there is something sacred. Something enduring. Something that cannot be silenced.
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