When I first started the Milan Art Mastery Program, I was still recovering from post-COVID complications and dealing with serious heart inflammation. I was unsure whether I would fully recover, and honestly, I was unsure about almost everything in my life at that point.
Art, and learning how to create it properly, gave me hope again. It gave me something to work toward, something to strive for, and a sense of control at a time when my health and my future felt very uncertain.
Today, two years later, I am a professional artist. I sell my work internationally, exhibit regularly in galleries, and participate in curated, high-level art shows across Europe. I am healthy—actually healthier than I have ever been—and I am happy. Most importantly, I am building my own art business and creating a life that truly feels like mine.
Art was part of my life from a very early age. My great-grandfather was a hobby painter who worked in oil and watercolor, and I spent a lot of time at my great-grandparents’ house. I probably spent more time in his studio than anywhere else.
I was fascinated by his huge wooden palette and the vibrant colors on it. I used to sit on his lap and watch him paint. One day, he gave me my own little table, some watercolors, and paper so I could paint alongside him.
But when it was time to choose an education, my parents encouraged me to pursue something “practical” that would provide financial security. So I studied chemistry, which was my second passion. I have always been a science fiction nerd and deeply curious about how the world works, so science made sense to me too.
That path eventually led me into the corporate world. I became a leader, but over time, that world started to wear me down. I struggled with decisions that did not align with my values, with inequality, and with structures that often resisted creative or progressive solutions. In that environment, decisions were only made when a positive outcome seemed guaranteed.
But that is not how life works—and it is not how true growth or success happens either.
For a long time, I felt trapped in what I now call a golden cage. It looked safe from the outside, but inside, it was slowly making me sick.
During the Covid period, I became very sick. I had heart inflammation, and it would not go away. For a long time, I felt lost, searching for a doctor who could help me. I was on the verge of depression when we remembered that we had a friend who was a heart specialist.
We reached out to her, and she invited us to her hospital. She ran every test possible. That evening, we had dinner with her family, and I sat next to Alma, her eight-year-old daughter.
Alma became my muse.
She and I had one of the best conversations I had had in years. She showed me her sketchbook, and her enthusiasm completely lit something inside me. The next morning, I started drawing in the hotel room, using the little notepad and pen provided by the hotel.
Since that day, there has not been a single day when I have not painted or drawn.
I started practicing and sharing my progress in my WhatsApp status. My friends saw my early, very imperfect artwork, and they also saw my slow way back out of illness. One day, a friend commented:
“You don’t have to go back to your job. Just become an artist.”
At first, I thought, “I don’t know…” But the idea had been planted.
I started researching how to become a professional artist. I watched many YouTube videos and eventually came across an advertisement for Milan Art. At first, I honestly thought it might be a scam. Then I signed up for one of the free tutorials.
After about ten minutes, I knew: this was exactly what I had been looking for.
The Milan Art Mastery Program gave me the foundation I had been searching for. I learned how to draw, how to get proportions right, how to paint well, and especially how to work with oils.
But the journey was about much more than technical skills.
At that time, I was still sick, and the program gave my life structure. It gave me something to wake up for and something to look forward to. My studio was tiny back then, just a corner in our office, but it became a place of hope, discipline, and possibility.
One of the biggest differences for me was the community. Sharing my work, receiving supportive feedback from fellow students, and getting input from coaches made a huge impact. Later, I also worked with a mentor, which became another major boost for my skills and for my understanding of what it really takes to become a professional artist.
But the most important shift was internal.
For the first time in my life, I truly showed up for myself. I put in the work every day because I realized I was not just learning how to paint, I was learning how to build a life that actually belonged to me.
So much has changed.
I am healthy again. I sold around $18,000 worth of paintings in 2025 before I had even graduated from the program. I am building my own business, and I am proud not only of the external results but also of the change in my own perception of life.
Life does not just happen to me anymore. I live and lead my life now.
I have the courage to build my own company, and I truly feel it in my bones that I can do it. Actually, I am already doing it.
This year, I am represented in four galleries, I will participate in three curated high-level art shows, and the list keeps growing. What I am most proud of is not just the sales or the exhibitions, but the fact that I built the courage, discipline, and belief to completely reshape my life.
My advice to someone in my old position would be simple: “Have faith and be bold.”
Have faith that it can work out if you are willing to put in the work and show up for yourself every day. When you commit to that kind of mindset unapologetically, your mind starts looking for ways to make it happen.
And then you need the courage to go against the common belief of the “starving artist.”
I do not believe that story is the truth. I believe it is often repeated by people who never really tried, or who never learned how to make it work.
Being an artist requires creativity, yes—but it also requires discipline, courage, strategy, and resilience.
If you do it, do it right.
Follow the journey and explore the work:
If you are feeling stuck, uncertain, or like there is something more you are meant to do, the Milan Art Mastery Program might be the path you have been searching for. It is more than just learning how to paint—it is about building the skills, mindset, and confidence to create a life and career as an artist on your own terms. If you are ready to take that step, to commit to yourself and your growth, this could be where your journey begins.