Four Years of Frustration: The Truth About Art School

I’m in color theory class at Savannah College of Art and Design with my big box of colored papers. There are about 300 3x5 papers in this box, each a different color.
This box cost my parents over $100 at the art supply store. It's completely ridiculous. It’s some kind of hoity-toity proprietary design school “must-have” to, I guess, understand color and the theory about it.
I resent the whole thing. I much prefer to mix paint and understand color theory based on pigment, not papers. I have my fancy high-end X-Acto knife set I was required to get, the very expensive mat board I had to buy, and my green gridded cutting mat. I also have the overpriced specific-brand glue stick with archival glue. This all feels so dumb and crafty.
I am obediently sitting at my desk, waiting for the professor to give instructions. I look around and notice that most of the art students are excited. I know I have a bad attitude and am having trouble shaking it.
The professor comes around and hands out a syllabus of all the color theory we will learn over the next four months. I look through the syllabus and read things like, “Create a color wheel of primary colors. Create a color wheel of primary and secondary colors. Create a color wheel of primary, secondary, and tertiary colors.”
The syllabus is filled with exercises of cutting out these papers with my X-Acto knife and gluing them to the expensive mat board to learn which colors are complementary or analogous, what are tints or shades, how to create triadic color balance...I can't believe it.
Four months of cutting and gluing papers like I’m in kindergarten. What in the world is this all about? How could anyone stand for this? My parents are paying a fortune for me to learn how to be an artist. How can I learn how to be an artist with this ridiculous set of already-colored paper? I’m a painter.
And seriously, archival glue? X-Acto sets? Give me some scissors and rubber cement. How elitist can they be? Oh yes, I need this archival mat board at $15 a sheet to preserve my precious handmade color wheels. What kind of hell am I in?
The Slow Death of Creativity

Every week I suffered through this class, and going through it with a group of people who could not see the insanity of it all made me angrier and angrier.
Why weren't we at least making all of these dumb wheels and diagrams and blocks by just mixing paint? It would be so much faster and more educational. Why weren't we mixing colors to match values in black and white? Why weren't we learning about pigments and saturation and the properties of paint? If they wanted us to be so hands on, then let us learn how to make our own paints with a glass plate and glass mull.
I literally hated my box of colored papers. We were required to preserve every scrap we didn't use each week in case we needed that same color later. I had endless rectangles of cut mat board with stupid X-Acto cut paper on them. I could hardly believe this was a college course. This was by far the worst art class I had ever taken, but it wasn't the only lame class.
Drawing 101 was almost as bad. In four months, we only managed to learn about line, contour, shading, value, and cross-hatching, completing just one drawing of a still life of white objects on a white cloth—toilet paper rolls, styrofoam cups, eggs, white bowls, and white vases. It was a boring white still life, and drawing it for a week could be fine. But we were required to draw this still life on a giant 30x44 sheet of paper for more than a month. This class that should have lasted a week was strung out over four months.
I felt like I was learning at the slowest pace you can imagine. I would learn how to be an artist much faster if I just didn't go to school and painted on my own every day. It was heartbreaking to be trapped inside of a room of moody teenagers all day drawing toilet paper and eggs. I didn't mind starting at the basics, but this pace was infuriating.
I suspected that every proper degree had to be taught inside a magical four-year program. So these art classes had to be strung out and stretched. Drawing 1, 2, and 3; then Figure Drawing 1, 2, and 3; then Painting 1, 2, and 3; then Figure Painting 1, 2, and 3. We completed an average of 3-4 paintings and 3-4 drawings every four months.
What Art School Left Out

I didn't have even one class that covered developing my style, or that talked about symbolism or themes I could paint in. We painted still life and figures. Everything was academic. If they had to fill four years, then fill it. Teach me about the art world. How to exhibit my artwork. How to write a biography or an artist statement. Teach me about brush work and different techniques. How to use acrylic or collage or ink. Teach me how to work with pastels and watercolor. Teach me how to run a studio or make prints. Don't they want their graduates to be successful artists?
The four years droned on while every professor told us to make art for the sake of art and not to even think about making a living. The only way we could make a living is if we went to graduate school. They started grooming us for graduate school after two years. They kept telling us that this is when you really find your style as an artist. Until then, we were just learning all the things we needed for graduate school.
One of our friends, Jimmy, was planning on going to graduate school. I could have begged my dad to fund it, but something in me knew it was a scam. We toured the graduate studios and saw what they were creating—giant terrible abstracts where they would stand back 15 feet from their painting and throw buckets of paint at their canvas, or giant yarn installations, or heaps of metal scraps arranged into “sculptures.” I saw a huge pile of chicken bones that were spray painted baby blue.
I had enough. I didn't see anything that convinced me that any of the graduate students were going to make it in the marketplace. I didn't think anyone would pay even a single dollar for a baby blue chicken bone. The next time I heard the professors touting graduate school, I wanted to laugh.
Aside from the elitist art school garble we all endured, I did learn to draw a bit and I learned to paint a bit. Not great. But enough. After four years of art school, I should have learned a whole lot more. I should have walked out with confidence and belief in myself as an artist and a knowing that I could make it. I should have graduated with an artistic style and voice. I should have known how to build a brand, create a marketing strategy, promote my art, and serve humanity.
We should have been told that artists change the world and shift culture. We should have been told how powerful we are.
From Frustration to Revelation

The worst part of art school was that box of papers. The best part of art school, I didn't understand until 18 years later. I didn't realize the value of four years of art school until I owned my own art school. I opened my school in 2010 and taught little old ladies from Sun City how to loosen up until 2014.
But then one day in my kitchen, as I was ordering paper online, the heavens opened, and I received a mental download of a curriculum. It was a one-year program that would teach everything I missed out on in my art school. This curriculum had you paint 65 paintings and 30 drawings in just one year. You would find your art style, create a portfolio, build a branded website, learn all kinds of crazy amazing things about yourself, and graduate with confidence and a one-year plan for success.
I resented a four-year degree in nothing. I resented my color theory class and aimed to create the most revolutionary and compelling color theory the world has ever known. I revolted against chicken bones, bad abstracts, and heaps of scrap metal and yarn, instead upholding beauty and art that would sell.
I wanted my art school to be known for artists who would inspire the world with what they create and astound their nations with the fullness of love in their hearts. They would apprehend the divine and make it manifest on canvas. My school would raise up artists who knew their power—prophets and creators, lovers and warriors—who would carry light into the dark, speak beauty into chaos, and reveal heaven through their hands.
Has a disappointment ever pushed you toward your true purpose?
I too went to a Art school. Colorado Institute of Art- 2 years, and not enuf to make a living out how to even start: That was 1986. And now, Thank God, Ellie, you downloaded that vision from God and reached all of us lost artist souls searching for our peace. I’m currently a Mastery Program student , now so many years later.. my soul files as I go thru the lessons.. Thank you Thank you Im so grateful you made the Mastery Program & put it online.
❤️🌼🦋~ Molly/ Seattle, Wa
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Elli Milan Art replied:
Thank you Molly! Excited about what impact we all make! 🙌🏽
Elli, it was the same for vocal majors. It was made clear in my second year that we would all teach. Teach!? No. Not interested. I wanted to sing. So I took art 101. I had always drawn. And not too bad. So our first project was a pointillism. Dr. Instructor said there pointillisms so good you have to step up to see all the dots. Cool. So I pulled out the huge cookie jar, pencils and the newsprint pad. It wasn’t bad. The next class I saw the other students had done things like cups, glasses, dogs and cat heads. With huge dots spaced at one half and some at one inch apart.
Dr. Instructor pinned my cookie jar on the easel and ripped into me. “This is not pointillism.” After class some of the other students were very apoligetic. They said they could see the dots even from where they were sitting. I dropped the class.
But I never stopped loving art.
Over the years I’ve learned pastel, and some acrylics. But after watching you I see now how oil really spices things up.
I’m gathering the rest of what I need for supplies so I can enroll in your classes. I’ve never been so excited!
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Elli Milan Art replied:
These dr. Instructors show never teach. Their dreams died in college and so they just taught when they were finished. And cycle repeats. Just a starving artist lie! I’m so glad you are following your passion.
I for one, am so grateful that God turned your 4 years of frustration into 1 year of favour and blessing for thousands of us around the world!
I’m so excited to have joined the Mastery Program this week! I’ve been excitedly telling everyone that I’ve just signed up for the best art school in the world, which crams 4 years of art school into 1 but takes out all the boring stuff and adds in the extras we actually need like building our own business!
Thank you for what you’ve endured and created Elli. May God continue to bless you and your family immensely and give you dreams and visions that come to pass 🥰
♥️Marian, Australia
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Elli Milan Art replied:
Aww! Congratulations! I’m so excited for you! And really happy to hear how clearly the message of what we offer has reached you. I feel certain it will deliver for you! 🥰
Elli – I totally agree with you, so much of college can be so archaic. There are so many ways for people to learn. I think what your doing is amazing. Thank you for encouraging us to teach, I love it.
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Elli Milan Art replied:
🥰
Elli, I am always amazed by your tenacity and strength revealed in your story telling. I was once told by a fellow U.S. Merchant Marine that I was obstinately tenacious. I absolutely marveled at the thought of being perceived in that manner. I felt it was my duty to gain as much knowledge and skill in order to successfully fulfill my positions and satisfy my own expectations. Somewhere along the line of a multitude of hardships and disappointments I have lost this ability. I so desperately want to find this part of me again so that I can truly be a world changer through discovering myself again in art. Elli, you are truly my mentor and a divine beacon of hope to my soul. Is it possible that you could offer up some advice for me? Thank you so much for all that you do!!
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Elli Milan Art replied:
HI Donna, Its really tough when you have faced many disappointments and discouragements. When that happens to me, I feel sorrow for myself a little bit and it takes the steam out of me for a short while, but then I think back to what I KNOW. I know the plans that God has for me and they are good and to prosper me and give me ALL the desires of my heart, so that is what keeps me going and I get reinvigorated into the dream and plan and keep running. As I run and push, then some successes come too. For a while I had to write down the positive things I heard from God when I believed and was in faith so that on the days when I lost it and felt discouraged I could read it. Maybe on a day when you feel positive and can see the vision clearly for your life, write it down, like a future letter to yourself you can read the next time you feel discouraged. Hope that helps!
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