Pretty Pictures and Divine Revelation: What They Never Told Me in Art School

34 comments

It's 2009, and I have 33 pieces ready to ship to Philadelphia’s Whitestone Gallery. I just received a huge break in my career: a solo show of my and John’s collaborative work.

We have been fighting for every sale since the economy crashed last year. The show will take place for 45 days starting July 1st, in the city where our country was birthed and its Liberty Bell rang out the sound of independence, with the inscribed words, "Proclaim LIBERTY throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof.”

I am incredibly excited and have never had a solo show before. All the work is done, and the paintings are lining the walls of my studio in stacks.

I think about my life as an artist and how I got here. My professors in art school had a unified message that if we were studying art in college, we were the sacrificial lambs dedicating ourselves to something no one appreciated or wanted. We were unlikely to make a living at it and would join the ranks of the other elites to make art for art’s sake.

Whenever a painting looked too beautiful or attractive, we were accused of making just a “pretty picture.” I heard words like “Bourgeois” and “overly decadent” for the first time in my life. I wasn't very clear on what it all meant, but I knew I didn't want to do it.

Art school was very much indoctrination camp. All the teachers, admin, and professors worked in a coordinated fashion to keep us from thinking in terms of providing a service and instead convince us that we were the revolutionaries who would take down capitalism once and for all with our giant abstract vagina paintings. Weirdness, darkness, and obscure themes derived from the small library of existential literature were encouraged. Self-portraits were celebrated. A simple landscape, still life, or beautiful portrayal of nature or animals, on the other hand, was publicly ridiculed.

Each critique was rife with 20-year-olds lamenting their angsty life and childhood traumas. “Father” was a dirty word. We were pressured to make sweeping judgements against overpopulation, consumerism, and upward mobility. But the very last thing we were allowed to paint was just a “pretty picture.” Every student aspired to be anything but a “pretty picture artist.” The last thing we wanted was the scarlet “PP” label and to become the constant scorn of this fine art community.

I used to think, “I don't really care what these 20-year-olds have to say about the world. They haven't even ever left the country. They hardly know anything and haven't lived life yet. Who are they to be the thinkers and philosophers of our age? The daddy they hate paid for their education, only to learn they would become baristas and waiters unable to make a living as an artist.”

The whole system seemed rigged and very much opposite of how I was raised by my Rush Limbaugh-loving father. He was very much a proud capitalist and wanted me to make pretty pictures and marry an engineer.

When “Pretty Pictures” Aren’t Enough

An abstract city painting from Elli and John's show

I look at my studio filled with pretty pictures and realize I have made a whole career of selling one pretty picture after another and have been able to make a full-time living as an artist. My husband doesn't have a “real” job to support me. He is also an artist, and together we cracked the code and are making a great living solely by selling our art.

I smile thinking about my art school and how they would never have us back to share with the others that you CAN make a living as an artist and we were living proof. There would be no keynotes or art school graduation speeches, nor would we even get a line in their newsletter highlighting our success.

To them, artists who create pretty pictures are not real artists. Real artists make artwork with an accompanying thesis statement using elevated vocabulary, building a lavish word salad that no one understands.

I sit enjoying my success, feeling for all of the artist baristas out there with half-filled tip jars. But then I see an email flash across my screen from the gallery. The gallery director is asking for my artist statement, titles for each piece, and blurbs about what the paintings mean or what inspired them!

My heart sinks, and my entire art career collapses in one second of reading her email. What do the paintings mean? I am immediately back in art school feeling that sickening pressure to dredge up some kind of meaningfulness about the art I created that will impress the snobby fine art police.

This art isn't about anything. Most of them are abstracts with color palettes that will match the couch. I’ve sold close to 8,000 pretty picture paintings, and now that I’ve finally landed a solo art show at a beautiful white-walled gallery, I have to suddenly be meaningful and deep.

I think about calling the gallery director and telling her I’m a giant fraud and I just paint pretty pictures. My paintings don't have meaning, and I am a capitalist just like my dad. I enjoy making spaces beautiful, and just the act of spreading paint or collaging paper down is enough for me. But then I realize my opportunity would disappear and this gallery would no longer represent John and me.

Lying and Ladders

I decide to just make something up. I’ll conjure a meaning right out of thin air and use big words and write long, confusing, looping, esoteric pontifications. I need a name for the show as well. I decide to begin with titles.

I stare at the largest painting in the show, a 48x60”. I felt conflicted asking God to help me creatively come up with a lie, but I ask God nonetheless for a title. In one moment, it’s like the veil splits in two and the heavens shake just a bit. I hear loud and clear the word “Traffic” in my head.

As I stare at the painting, the meaning of it is instantly revealed to me. I can see this painting is about the traffic between heaven and earth. I see little round portals floating up, and if I look closely, I can see little army men descending little drawn ladders and coming down into an abstract city. My heart beats a bit faster as I look around at the other abstract paintings.

There is a group of abstracts in various sizes that are close-up portraits of a prayer bubble from the other large painting. The prayer portal has a mitochondria tail that makes me feel like every prayer has its own DNA and is regarded in heaven as something singular and precious. The meaning of each painting is revealed to me easily, and I start to see a theme. I decide the abstract landscapes will hang next to the abstract city pieces, and we’ll call them “Blessed in the Country” and “Blessed in the City.”

Then the name of the show came to me: “Heaven’s Exchange.” I sit in my studio chair shaking at the glorious wonderment that God showed me. I am completely entranced in my thoughts. I see my entire career race in front of me playing like a movie on fast-forward and rewind. I begin to see every poppy painting differently. Each still life, animal, and abstract becomes a hidden treasure of communication from the Divine. God speaks through paintings!

Bringing Heaven to Earth

An abstract landscape painting from John and Elli's show

God cares about art. The act of creating a piece IS the message. Creating, bringing forth what was only just a faint, distant, murky image in our hearts, is miraculous. The Divine Hand holds our brush with us and records the messages from heaven in every brushstroke. Obedience, devotion, and humility are the art supplies heaven needs to pour forth its speech. The heavens speak 24/7, every moment of each day, awaiting a willing brush, pencil, or palette knife to make manifest all that is hoped for.

I sit in my studio alone, stunned at the most glorious and profound revelation of my career. This is the bridge that brings the summit of “meaningful” art to the ledge of my couch art for money.

The whole wondrous world begins to open for me. I transition from the liar and thief to a simple conduit and willing heart to transmit a hidden message. An ancient scribe that sits in the storehouses of heaven and brings forth the things of old and the things of new. A messenger of hope, that the divine is present and actively participating in life.

We are not alone. There are entities that support us, and whether we know it or not, we consort together in threading and sewing God’s present tapestry that shapes history. We are the present-day brushstrokes that construct the masterpiece of the future. Our couch art for dollars is God’s secret weapon to bring about transformation, that invites heaven to earth, replaces beauty for ashes, and brings freedom to the captives.

It is the pretty pictures that will change the world.

Share your story in the comments below!


34 comments


  • Joan

    That was the same attitude from my art department, and so I always thought of myself as going into teaching rather than art. And I was a career teacher.


  • Susan

    such a wonderfully expressed article!

    i stopped at: God cares about art. and read that over and over as tears welled up. i could barely read on for the words were all swimming.

    ‘our art for dollars is God’s secret weapon to bring about transformation that invites heaven to earth…’

    i’ve struggled to find peace with money all my adult life, having seen what it did to my parents who had neither control nor wise management of it. so i grew up believing money to be the evil. but how you framed money in your article did something to that belief because something felt undone and loosened somehow, followed by a distinct sense of occupying a new spaciousness from the moment prior.

    wow Elli. thank you.

    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Wow! Susan. Thank you for sharing this! You made my morning!!


  • René

    You are blessed with a very beautiful God given gift. An open mind and channel to receive and comprehend the communication from that divine realm. To have had that revelation at that moment in time. Always the right moment. Your career did not end there, it only really started. Thank you so for sharing this. It helps and inspires me to even be more grateful for what is happening in my life. What a great time to be alive!
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Yes! It truly is a great time to be alive! 🥰


  • Diane

    Generally when I paint, the subject has a story. Although, I am going in all directions without being able to find my voice.
    I do not have a specific story that I recall right now about my paintings, but it did happen that the painting of another artist was speaking to me so much, that I did leave a message to the artist to make sure she was ok!
    She wrote back to me saying she was waiting a call from the doctor for her son hoping that everything would be fine. She couldn’t believe how the painting « spoke » to me and she didn’t told anybody about her son
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Wow! How interesting!


  • Cheryl Gillespie

    Beautiful Eli. I am always amazed at your ability to encourage and inspire! It is truly a gift.
    I recently attended the Sarasota workshop. Truly a novice having just completed the beginners class. But my heart was full to honor a story that has captivated my mind and heart for a couple of years.
    As we went through the weekend, I began to realize that the story I was trying to render was as much about myself as it was the person’s life I was trying to honor.
    I realized that weekend that art truly has a way of speaking to our soul and surprising us by bringing healing and spaces that we didn’t know existed or have been suppressed.
    I can’t thank you enough for being a true educator and teaching a true skills of art while also encouraging us to give expression to the deepest part of us.
    May God continue to bless your work, your family, and all of them alone art community.
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Wow! Cheryl. That’s so cool. I’m so glad you got to experience some art magic. It’s always so profound to know how the art is speaking to us. I’m so glad you went to the workshop and we got to meet.


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