Cassandra’s Truth (after Cassandra)

$3,200.00

So they set my life in flames.
Do you believe me now?

24 × 36 in | Oil on canvas | 2026

Cassandra is remembered as the prophetess cursed to know the truth yet never be believed.

She foresaw the fall of Troy, warning those around her, but her voice was dismissed as madness.

In this portrait, she exists between reflection and presence. One face meets the viewer while another lingers in glass. A doubling that mirrors her fate: to see clearly, yet remain unheard.

The dark ground presses inward while her skin gleams with its own quiet fire, insisting on the clarity she carried all along.

Cassandra becomes a symbol for every voice dismissed as inconvenient or irrational. Every truth is ignored until its consequences become impossible to deny.

Disbelief does not erase truth.

It only postpones its reckoning.

So they set my life in flames.
Do you believe me now?

24 × 36 in | Oil on canvas | 2026

Cassandra is remembered as the prophetess cursed to know the truth yet never be believed.

She foresaw the fall of Troy, warning those around her, but her voice was dismissed as madness.

In this portrait, she exists between reflection and presence. One face meets the viewer while another lingers in glass. A doubling that mirrors her fate: to see clearly, yet remain unheard.

The dark ground presses inward while her skin gleams with its own quiet fire, insisting on the clarity she carried all along.

Cassandra becomes a symbol for every voice dismissed as inconvenient or irrational. Every truth is ignored until its consequences become impossible to deny.

Disbelief does not erase truth.

It only postpones its reckoning.

About the Divine Outcast collection

Divine Outcast is a series of feminist portraits reimagining women from mythology, religion, and art history whose stories were distorted by fear, shame, or misunderstanding. Each painting restores their voice, presenting them not as symbols or warnings, but as powerful women reclaiming their own narratives.