Howard Fishman is a regular contributor to The New Yorker and The New York Times, where he has published essays on music, film, theater, literature, travel, and culture. His bylines have also appeared in the The Boston Glove, Rolling Stone, The Telegraph, Vanity Fair, The Washington Post, Artforum, San Francisco Chronicle, Mojo, The Village Voice, Jazziz, and Salmagundi. His play, A Star Has Burnt My Eye, was a New York Times “Critics Pick.” As a performing songwriter and bandleader, Fishman has toured internationally as a headlining artist for over two decades. He has released eleven albums to date, and is the producer of the album Connie’s Piano Songs: The Art Songs of Elizabeth “Connie” Converse. His book, To Anyone Who Ever Asks: The Life, Music, and Mystery of Connie Converse, was shortlisted for the Plutarch Award for Best Biography of 2023.
Jen DeLuna

Jen DeLuna (b. 1999), a Filipino and Colombian-American painter, explores the feminine through the lenses of affinity and vulnerability.
DeLuna uses found and family photographs as the basis for her work, capturing the tension between movement and stillness, personal and public.
Her figurative works in Dust and Sweat and Feigning Grace are wrapped in blurry hazes yet pierce through the surface with shining highlights, creating a simultaneously uncanny and invasive impression. Her mystifying and alluring style builds visual and emotional tension in her works, calling into question their own viewership.



Do You Choose Simple Or Complex – Why Not Both?
There is a simplicity in choosing what you love and building your life around it. Then again, there is also complexity. These can co-exist. While the answer may be obvious, the path to get there could be slightly more of a trek. But that is no reason not to tread it. Choosing a life in the art world often looks like this. Be bold, embrace the things in life that truly matter. There may come a day when you look back and evaluate the choices you made – let this one the the one you point to with pride. Here are some opportunities to propel you.
MacDowell Fellowships offer transformative residencies focused on artistic excellence. Around 300 artists are selected annually based on artistic excellence. Artists from all backgrounds and disciplines are encouraged to apply. For more information and to apply, visit the website. Deadline for spring/summer 2025 applications is September 10.
Princeton Arts Fellows spend two years teaching one course per semester or completing an artistic assignment, engaging actively with students. The stipend is $92,000 annually; Ph.D. holders from Princeton and certain past affiliates are ineligible. To learn more, visit the website. Deadline is September 10.
Hodder Fellows at Princeton receive a $92,000 stipend for a 10-month appointment with no teaching duties, open to non-U.S. citizens, excluding past Princeton Arts Fellowship recipients. To learn more, visit the website. Deadline is September 10.
Praxis Center is your safe space – and the place that pushes you beyond your comfort zone. We are here to motivate you and help you understand how to successfully move into or renew a career in the arts. Whether you are emerging, mid-career or beyond, there is something for you here.
Brainard Carey is an author, artist and educator. He is the director of Praxis Center for Aesthetics and is currently faculty at the School of Visual Arts in NYC. He has written seven books for artists, including Making it in the Art World. His seventh book, The Problems in the Art World: An Artist’s A-Z Action Guide, is available now.
Sarah Brenneman
Sarah Brenneman (b.1975, Middletown, OH) lives and works in West Orange, New Jersey. She received her degrees in painting from Columbus College of Art (BFA) and Virginia Commonwealth University (MFA).
She has had several solo shows including with Garvey|Simon at Artisan Lofts (New York, NY – a two-person exhibition with Gary Petersen 2024); Gold Scopophilia (Montclair, NJ) in 2020 and with Jeff Bailey Gallery (New York, NY) in 2004, 2006 and 2011. She has exhibited both nationally and internationally most recently with La Grange Gallery, (Reims, France) in 2022.
She has been awarded residencies with Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Millay Colony of the Arts, Chashama, Virginia Center for Creative Arts, Liquitex-Just Imagine Residency and VCCA, Moulin à Nef, Auvillar France. Brenneman’s paintings are included in many private and corporate collections including The Aspen Contemporary Art Collection, Citigroup, Cleveland Clinic, Sprint and The Progressive Corporation.



Elias Wessel

Elias Wessel is an artist whose conceptual work moves between photography, painting and site specific installations with moving images and sound. He has had exhibitions at 1014 New York (formerly known as Goethe House); Palais Beauharnais, Paris; Art Collection of the Willy-Brandt-Haus, Berlin; NRW-Forum, Dusseldorf; Art Basel, Basel; Museum Pfalzgalerie Kaiserslautern (mpk); and Museum of Contemporary Art, Taipei among many others.
His works are included in public and private collections such as the Spallart Art Collection, Salzburg; AXA Art Collection, Cologne; and the German Parliament’s Art Collection (Kunstsammlung des Deutschen Bundestages), Berlin. Recent publications include Textfetzen (Kulturverlag Kadmos, 2022) and Aesthetics of Conflict (Verlag Kettler, 2023). He is based in New York City since 2008 with regular stays in Germany.


