Elizabeth Zelasko
08/27/2025
As an art student in New York City I had a chance to see a rare traveling Byzantine icon show. I was captivated with everything I saw, but one image of the Blessed Mother in particular caught my eye.
I thought the gesture of Mary’s arms so peculiar – as though she was holding something, but her arms were empty. Reading the description next to the small icon, I learned that it was the only surviving piece from a triptych depicting Christ crucified in the center panel, with John the beloved disciple and Mary standing on either side, looking up at Our Lord. I went on to read that Mary’s arms were in the position of holding a child, her child, no longer a swaddled babe but an unrecognizable man hanging from a cross. I burst out in tears right there in the Met. The mother of God had been depicted in a way I had never seen before: human, holy, pierced with sorrow.
When asked to create an image of Saint Monica, the mother of Augustine, it was this icon of Our Lady which came immediately to mind: Monica, who lived her sainthood by fervently loving and praying for her child, who had grown to be a man of renown and debauchery. How she must have united her heart to the heart of Mary, the mother of God! I chose to show Monica seated on a throne similar to Mary’s “sedes sapientiae” or “seat of wisdom,” showing us the shared heart of a mother. Saint Monica is depicted with the same empty arms as Our Lady, watching her child suffer his own cross, patiently waiting for him to come to Christ’s cross.
This painting resides at the Augustine Institute in Denver, CO. The Augustine Institute commissioned this painting from Elizabeth Zelasko and has used the image in their media.
08/10/2025
“No spiritual work comes into the world without great suffering. It always challenges the whole person.” - Saint Edith Stein
Saint Edith Stein (Teresa Benedicta of the Cross), was a German Jewish philosopher who converted to Catholicism and became a Carmelite nun. She died in a concentration camp at Auschwitz on August 9, 1942. She is one of six co-patron saints of Europe.
03/05/2025
“The entire purpose of sacred art is to help us pray, pray together and center our thoughts on the transcendent truths of our faith,” said Elizabeth Zelasko. “I had many hours to sit with the Virgin Mary at the foot of the Cross while I was painting. I thought about the magnitude of that moment, her Immaculate Heart being pierced with a sword, the evil one losing, and her great love for us and for our Archdiocese. I prayed for all of you while I worked. May this image be a blessing for you.”
The unveiling comes as the Church kicks off the public period of a nine-year novena in preparation for the 2,000-year anniversary of the Paschal Mystery, traditionally said to have occurred in the year 33 A.D.
01/22/2025
Swipe ➡️ to see the different layers of my painting!
09/05/2024
She changed the world with her Beauty.
Happy Feast Day Mother Teresa!
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