A 250TH ANNIVERSARY SERIES

ART for
FREEDOM

Art For Freedom

As America recognizes its 250th anniversary, Art for Freedom is deploying powerful images created by renowned artist Shepard Fairey to celebrate the First Amendment freedoms that shape and uphold our democracy.

Through bold imagery and public participation, we invite people across the country to reflect on what freedom means to them and why protecting our shared rights matters.

PRESS
SPEECH
ASSEMBLY
Art For Freedom
THE SERIES

DEFEND YOUR
FREEDOMS

Three original works by Shepard Fairey, each honor a First Amendment freedom. Download a poster, share across your channels, and add your voice.

ART IN ACTION

What does freedom mean to you?

Art for Freedom is using art to help spark reflection, conversation, and civic engagement around the freedoms that allow communities to exercise our rights.

We invite individuals, organizations, and communities to join us by sharing the artwork to convey why these freedoms matter and what they make possible in their lives and across our nation. Join us by sharing the art and reflect: what does freedom mean to you?

ABOUT BG
THE ARTIST

SHEPARD FAIREY

ABOUT THE ARTIST

For more than three decades, Shepard Fairey has used art to explore the relationship between power, civic engagement, and public life from his iconic OBEY GIANT campaign to the widely recognized HOPE poster and the “We the People” series that debuted at the 2017 Women’s March creating images that encourage people to look more closely at the ideas, institutions, and values that shape society, with work appearing in museums and public spaces around the world, reflecting a career dedicated to making art accessible beyond traditional galleries and bringing important civic conversations into everyday life.

Created in recognition of America’s 250th anniversary, this series examines the enduring significance of the freedoms of speech, press, and assembly in a democratic society, drawing on both national symbols and contemporary civic themes to highlight the people who exercise these rights every day, and at a moment when many Americans feel divided from one another and disconnected from public institutions, the series uses art as a unifying force, inviting audiences to consider how these freedoms connect us, how they shape our shared future, and why each generation has a responsibility to uphold them.

SHEPARD FAIREY SHEPARD FAIREY