Perhaps I am just not thinking this through, but . . .
You are looking for a 'feathered mask'; brightest at the centre; fading out to the edges. You feel that this mask should be elliptical in shape, and which you will presumably stretch and rotate the mask to align with the shape of the core of the galaxy in your image. What you then 'do' with the mask thereafter doesn't really matter - the choices are endless.
However, what you have done is to create an 'artistic representation' of a mask - in the way that so many non-astro-centric image-processing programs have advised you to do for decades (all founded in what was available when processing had to be done, chemically, 'in the darkroom').
Why not extract the mask 'directly from the image itself'?
That way you get the brightness contours that are applicanle to your actual image (not just a smooth blend due to some mathematical approximation).
Similarly, why rely on your ellipse as being anything even close to the approximate shape of your target? Why not use the 'actual shape' of the target itself - again 'directly extracted' from your image?
PixInsight provides all of this power - although, yes, you will need to gradually learn the tools available to be able to bring this power to work on your images.
The use of 'paint-on' masks (including mathematically-created shape approximations) has long since been superceded by pwoerful graphic processing platforms such as PI.
Don't get me wrong - I am not saying, "Don't do this" (quite the opposite, I would encourage everyone to 'get clever' with PixelMath) - what I am saying is, "Don't forget to explore the statistically-based PI tools that have been developed to perform 'artistic' operations in a more 'scientific' fashion".
Hope this helps.