The Horses and the Craftsmen: A Vision of Restoration

I’m in the middle of a vivid dream where a long procession of people are leading horses in a line. Some of the horses are wild and defiant, tossing their heads and moving in and out of line. Some stop walking and just look around or sniff the ground. Each horse is different, representing a range of sizes, breeds, and colors.
Then I see one of my current students leading a zebra. I think, “Oh I know her! That’s Tina!”
When I woke from the dream, I knew what it meant. I knew for the first time that the horses I had been painting and selling for a few years represented artists. Not just artists in general, but the artists I was teaching. I saw far more artists than I could physically teach in a year. There were thousands, maybe even hundreds of thousands. I felt it deeply. These were artists who would carry something significant into the world.
The dream stirred me. It encouraged me. It also unsettled me.
How would so many artists ever learn from me? How could I manage that kind of impact with my current schedule? How many artists could realistically move to Queen Creek, Arizona for a year?
At the time, the answer seemed obvious: very few.
But I soon came across something that expanded the vision even further.
Shapers of Culture

As I was listening to a podcast about creativity and mastery, the speaker referenced the ancient book of Zechariah and the craftsmen that are mentioned there.
I was curious, so I went and read it myself. I saw how Zechariah describes a vision where four horns had risen up and scattered the people. When he asks what they are, the angel explains that they represent powers that oppressed and terrorized.
Then he sees four craftsmen who come to terrify and throw down those horns.
That stopped me.
Not warriors. Not politicians. Craftsmen.
As governing powers rise and oppress, it is skilled makers who are sent to dismantle what has dehumanized people.
I began connecting this to everything I had studied about culture and art. Socrates said, “Show me the songs of a land, and I will show you her laws.” Kandinsky wrote that artists are prophetic, that they lead culture into a new epoch. Long before the modern art world existed, creativity lived in ornament, in textile, in architecture, in design. The craftsmen shaped the environment people lived in. They shaped the atmosphere.
Zechariah’s vision felt like that same truth written thousands of years ago. Artists rising from every direction. Skilled. Intentional. Ready.
More Powerful Than Fear

As I kept reading, I went back to the beginning of the chapter and saw the first vision: horses of different colors standing among myrtle trees in a low place. They were called the sent ones, patrolling the earth and reporting back its condition.
I immediately saw my dream again. Horses of many colors. Each one distinct.
In the vision, the horses are not on a mountain. They are in a ravine. Hidden. Quiet. Among myrtle trees. The myrtle is a low shrub. It is evergreen and fragrant—a reminder that restoration often begins quietly, and that power is not always loud or elevated.
Artists are like that.
We often work in obscurity. We observe. We carry something subtle. Our work travels farther than our bodies ever will. Paintings hang in homes across continents. Images move across screens. Symbols take root in places we may never visit.
We are sent in a different way.
As I read about the horns that scattered people so that they could no longer lift their heads, I could not ignore how relevant that felt. Oppression lowers the head. Corruption numbs people. Endless conflict exhausts the spirit.
Beauty does something different.
Beauty lifts the head.
Tyranny reduces people to survival. Beauty reminds them they are human and made for more than fear. Art does not overthrow governments by force. It reshapes the narrative. And whoever shapes the narrative, shapes the future.
The Burning Question

As this dream deepened in me, even riding my own horse Beau felt symbolic. The strength. The sensitivity. The way a horse responds to the slightest cue. An artist is powerful, but also perceptive. Strong, but guided.
Still, I had a very practical problem.
If the vision was true, if thousands of artists were meant to be skilled craftsmen who would influence culture, how would that happen through a tiny school in Arizona?
At that time, we could train about twenty-five artists a year.
Twenty-five.
How could something that small ever touch the world?
That question stayed with me.
And the answer did not come in the way I expected.
Next week’s Artist Odyssey will reveal what happens next. Join the Artist Odyssey community to make sure you don’t miss it.
Have you ever sensed that your art was connected to something bigger than you?
Hi Elli , I just happened to read this now . O graduated from the Mastery Program a few years ago. I can tell I am definitely one of your horses – I have improved my craftsmanship and I have touched many lives with my art. I was literally thinking the other day of how some artists appear to be connected in an invisible current of inspiration – often leading them to paint the same theme . Currently , I am obsessed with swallows just to find out that so many artists are also painting them . I looked up the symbolism of those birds and it perfectly represents the tough moment we are living now in the world and economically . It is pretty amazing 🤩. Thank you for everything you do and you are an inspiration !
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Elli Milan Art replied:
That’s so cool! Always important to paint your obsession.
Hi Ellie
I always look forward to read your e-mail.
I got tears in my eyes – what an amazing story how the Lord is using you. You have an AMAZING way of working with us (artists) and I think everyone feels that way. My prayer is also that Milan Art will be blessed and continue to influence artists in a positive way and that EVERY
painting sold will be a blessing for the house where it hangs.
Elli, Thank you for continuing to share your heart and how God has inspired vision in your life. I left a consuming career that sucked the life out of me and have been seeking to use my gifts, strengths, and art to bring hope and joy to those who face roadblocks and are weary. I feel that I have been wandering in the desert for two years. Your words are an oasis of refreshment reminding me of God’s goodness and care. I joined Milan shortly after I left my former career. I dove into the lessons and got through the under painting of my first painting. I was excited about how it turned out, but I froze and was afraid if I continued I would ruin it. It has been sitting on my easel untouched for about 18 months. I know I need to let go of my fear of failure. Thank you for your encouragement.
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Elli Milan Art replied:
Don’t let fear steal your dreams!! Make another subtractive painting just like it. Then having two will make it less precious.
Dear Eli, your newsletter about the horses and Zachariah speaks deeply to me. Yes, i think that as an artist we are world changers and even more when we Connect with JHWH our father in heaven. Thank you so much! I m looking forward to Part 2. Much love, Tanja
Yes! Elli, you heart and faith inspired me to Milan Institute well before the art and the mastery Program. I can visualize your visions and words and they inspire the soul to move forward when things don’t always add up.
I felt called to paint 3-4 yrs ago and I didn’t have anything to begin with or the means to finance it. In the beginning, I was like Lord I don’t even have a table or easel to work on, and within a week someone online nearby was giving away a drafting table. Then canvases appeared etc… I didn’t know what to paint and then the visions began to come, I started with my first painting and shortly after Abba took me on a painting detour.
I left an unhealthy relationship, moved into a place as a nanny and house manager for a young mom with 2 boys, and less than 6 months later they left the island and I was looking at no job or place to live… I became occupied at the time with hurricane service work and clean up after a small one hit the area… then I found myself volunteering full-time to help restore and paint houses in Puerto Rico. Not exactly the fine art painting I felt called to, but a life changing relationship with the Lord and others through several small broken down homes and sweet widows eager to feed us!After some family situations in the states, I came back to Puerto Rico and started painting again, this time both houses and art.
The art often found homes in places unexpected, visions and prayers for people God would bring to mind while I painted…leading to worship and eventually to the Milan Mastery Program.
Although with my busy working schedule as nanny, and service projects… my class completions take longer than I had hoped. But the joy of Lord is in the painting and in the stories behind each of them.
I journal the visions of people to paint as I move forward in classes. I feel and believe I am on the path with Milan to fulfill the purpose God has for me through visions painted and people prayed for and eventually a means and platform to share the story of the Lord and the beauty He surrounds us with daily!
I feel the joy and urgency and though I don’t know what it looks like at the moment. I know God is painting “my canvas” as I move forward into the calling and blessing… and I am grateful to have Eli and Dimitra leading the paths forward with faith, beauty, grace, strength and obedience! Thank you!
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