
Seattle Disability Arts Fest, Artwork by ET Russian
Seattle Disability Arts Festival
Pier 62 | Free
Saturday July 12, 12–5 pm
The first ever Disability Arts Festival! A day of music, dance, visual art, spoken word, clowning, and even a pageant highlighting decorated mobility devices.
All are welcome!
Pier 62. Photo by Erik Holsather.
Celebrate Disability Pride Month
2025 will launch the first ever Disability Arts Festival with a day of music, dance, visual art, spoken word, clowning, and even a pageant highlighting decorated mobility devices.
Come celebrate Disability Pride Month and witness our local artists and innovators front and center.
Set on Seattle’s waterfront at Pier 62, enjoy an arts festival unlike any other with the seas, mountains, and city as your backdrop!
Pier 62 Activities

Visitors enjoying a Spotlight at Waterfront Park event on Pier 62. Photo by Jo Cosme.
Event Schedule
12:00pm Johnny Wheels and the Swamp Donkeys
12:30pm Coast Salish Storytelling and Artistic Sign Language
1:00pm The Disabled List – Comedy
1:30pm Handtelling: ASL Performances from Deaf Hearts
2:00pm King Khazm
2:30pm Silent Half Hour I Sensory Friendly Experience
3:00pm Flying Blind
3:30pm Mindie Lind
4:00pm Pageant
4:30pm DJ Wheelz
Meet the Artists

Johnny “Wheels” and the Swamp Donkeys
Music Artist
The son of a traveling bass player and singer, Johnny “Wheels” Kennicott had music in his blood since birth, but expressing himself musically took on new importance when Johnny broke his neck in a childhood accident, leaving him paralyzed from the chest down.
“The days of football practice after school were definitely over”, Johnny says, but music still provided an outlet for his infectious energy and his creative potential.
Though his father’s instrument of choice and his early passion of playing drums were now out due to limited function, Johnny found, through determined trial and error, he could manipulate his paralyzed diaphragm to not only sing, but also blow the harmonica. Since that time, Johnny has been traveling the Pacific Northwest music scene, spreading the gospel of the blues.

King Khazm
Music Artist
King Khazm is an emcee, producer and community organizer who has become a prominent figure in the Hip-Hop community within Seattle and around the world. His work to engage and empower communities is demonstrated through over 25 years of music, art and community service.
Khazm serves as a board member of paralysis support organization The Here & Now Project, manager of the historic venue Washington Hall and executive director of Hip Hop community organization 206 Zulu.

Mindie Lind
Music Artist
As a musician and artist, Mindie has grabbed attention in Seattle and beyond. With her southern gothic sounds, she’s been named City Arts Magazine Artist of the Year, one of Seattle Magazine’s 50 Best Artists, and shared a stage with Lena Dunham and Ben Folds. She’s currently creating a score and album for the full-length feature by the same title as her Sundance short, View from the Floor. All songs are original, unreleased and coming soon. In the meantime, Mindie’s contributing her unvarnished takes of the crip experience to The Stranger and continues to champion crip culture in order to create stronger visibility and nuance around disability stories.

Dan Hurwitz
The Disabled List, Emcee
Dan is a Seattle-based comedian, writer, actor, and filmmaker. He was voted Best of Fest at both the Burbank and Jersey City Comedy Festivals, and was a semifinalist in the Seattle International Comedy Competition. In May 2024, Dan was named one of the “Undisputable Geniuses of Comedy” by The Stranger newspaper, and in August 2024 he performed on and curated the comedy lineup for Bumbershoot. Dan’s sharp wit and unique insights have made him a favorite in the PNW!

Kayla Brown
The Disabled List, Emcee
Kayla Brown (she/her) is a disabled activist and amateur comedian from Seattle. Kayla co-produces the comedy show The Disabled List, plays video games, reads guilty pleasure novels, and eats snacks.

Crystal Liston
Comedian
Crystal is a PNW native and has been in the disability game for 32 yrs. She has decided to throw her hat into the comedy arena in hopes that the fame will help out her political career.

Ian Crowley
Comedian
Ian is a comedian, writer, editor and filmmaker based in Seattle, Washington. Absurdity is at the core of his act, performing with a surreality that reflects his early life growing up in uncanny suburbs of Detroit, Michigan. He is a main player in the “Stinky Rat Academy” sketch show, and co-hosts “The MIILF Podcast”. In addition, he produces the Queers to the Front open mic as well as the Kitchen Sink Comedy open mic, which he co-founded. Ian has performed all over the PNW and has worked with veteran comics, collaborating as a director and editor on several projects. The golden eagle was his bird project in second grade. He tries to look like a golden eagle on stage…do YOU think he looks like a golden eagle?

Michael Bellevue
Comedian
Michael Bellevue is an avid sailor, reader and writer of Russian, standup producer, avid volunteer who’s produced several fundraisers for nonprofits, comedian, chess player since age 5, linguistics fan, and, self-evidently, Black. He volunteered at a food bank for 15 months during the pandemic.
Meet the Featured Visual Artists

E.T. Russian
Multi-Sensory Artist & Cartoonist
I am a multi-sensory artist and cartoonist. My graphic journalism is currently in the traveling show Graphic Medicine: Ill-Conceived and Well Drawn hosted by the National Library of Medicine. My #RAMPSOFDISTINCTION series is on permanent exhibition at WA State Convention Center and recently featured at the Seattle Architecture Foundation and the Bellevue Arts Museum Biennial. My recent solo shows (multi-sensory installations) were DOUBLE CLEAR at Hedreen Gallery and CASTING SHADOWS at Jack Straw Gallery. My work featured in Girlfriends of the Guerrilla Girls at Center on Contemporary Art, and Out of Sight: Survey of Contemporary NW Art. I am the author of The Ring of Fire Anthology and have been published in a number of books including Graphic Public Health, Skin, Teeth and Bone: A Disability Justice Primer, Disability in American Life: An Encyclopedia of Concepts, Politics, and Controversies, When Language Runs Dry, The Graphic Medicine Manifesto and Gay Genius, as well as periodicals PEN Magazine, The Stranger, The Seattle Weekly and Real Change. My comic Girls Gone Bile is in the US Library of Congress in the feminist collection Bloody Pussy. I codirected the documentary Third Antenna, am a featured artist with Sins Invalid and have received support from Art Matters, 4Culture, Seattle Office of Art & Culture, Jack Straw Foundation, Short Run and the University of Washington. I am a documentarian at heart and I love a good story. In addition to being an artist I am also a physical therapist.

Grace Flott
Classically Trained Painter
As a classically trained painter with disfigurement and chronic pain I document and complicate what it means to “look different” by remixing European narrative painting frameworks with embodied modes of printmaking. Raised in white suburban America, I spent my youth striving toward normalcy in all its forms until I experienced a major biographical disruption due to injury that placed my body firmly outside of mainstream media representation. Daily I confront external perceptions of myself as either ‘normal’ or ‘other’ and I am not aligned firmly with disabled nor non-disabled identity but rather occupy a liminal corporeality common to living with a visible difference. I resist reductive categorization and resurrect this in-betweeness from erasure and stigma by orienting my practice toward body liberation. Through inclusive portraiture, narrative painting and printmaking, I illuminate physical difference as a dynamic identity and trouble cultural binaries like abled/disabled, grotesque/beautiful, and pain/pleasure. Ultimately my work reprises art historical representations of women and socially challenged bodies in combination with disability culture and my personal symbology in order to create safety and belonging for all bodies. In doing so I touch on topics like performance, ritual, intimacy, invisibility/hyper-visibility, objectification and consumerism.
Accessibility at this Event
This event will provide the following resources, and the list will continue to be updated as more are added. Please see our full accessibility webpage here. To find these resources when attending the event, please visit the Friends of Waterfront Park Info Table.
- Accessible seating.
- ASL interpreters.
- Closed captioning (broadcast to personal device via QR code or link).
- Assisted listening devices.
- Sensory tent.
- Nursing tent
- Stage ramp.
- Cooling fans.
- Shade.
- Sensory kits (Noise-reducing headphones, ear plugs, blankets, scented and weighted neck wraps, fidget toys, etc.).
- Courtesy wheelchairs (By request).
- Reserved priority seating.
- Wheelchair charging port/outlet.
Please let us know if you have any accessibility accommodations not listed above at least a week prior to an event by emailing [email protected] and we will try our best to provide it!
I was honored to serve on the accessibility commission of Friends of Waterfront Park, and I am intimately aware of their commitment to access and serving historically underserved communities ‑‑including people who identify as disabled and experience barriers to engagement in many aspects of public life.Teresa Thuman Seattle Disability Arts Festival, Executive Director

Seattle Disability Arts Festival Logo
Meet Teresa Thuman
Executive Director | I have worked as a professional theatre artist, actor, director, teacher, producer and administrator since 1980. Much of my career has been in traditional regional theatres and conservatories accruing over 1000 professional production credits. My own declining mobility in recent decades has reshaped my priorities for access, my cultural sensibilities toward disability aesthetics, and a mission to realize authentic representation in the performing arts.

Meet Our Accessibility Advisory Committee
Friends launched the Accessibility Advisory Committee to bring together leaders and representatives of disability communities in Seattle and Puget Sound.
This committee provides feedback on improving Friends’ understanding and responsiveness to a diverse audience of people with disabilities. It is our intention for the Accessibility Committee members to support the facilitation of two-way communication with disability communities, advise about the development of creative solutions that will eradicate barriers, and produce recommendations that serve the mutual interest of the communities, businesses, and organizations impacted by Waterfront Park.

Pier 62. Photo by Jo Cosme.
Accessibility
Friends strives to ensure Waterfront Park, and our events are inclusive, accessible, and welcoming to everyone.
About Pier 62 Amenities: an outdoor space providing various amenities such as wheelchair accessible seating, shade, water stations, cooling fans, and ADA accessible restrooms.
Event Resources: Accessible seating, reserved priority seating, courtesy wheelchair, ASL interpretation, stage ramp, sensory tent, nursing station/tent, shade, charging station, closed captioning (QR), assisted listening devices, and sensory kits including noise-reducing headphones, ear plugs, blankets, scented and weighted neck wraps, fidget toys, etc.
Public elevators to reach the waterfront can be found at Overlook Walk, Pike Place Market Garage, Union St., Lenora St., and Bell St.
Learn more about accessibility resources at Waterfront Park here.
Waterfront Park is still under construction until 2025, accessible routes/navigation may be impacted.
Please email [email protected] with any questions or specific accommodation requests for events.
Please fill out our park experience survey HERE with any feedback on how we can make your experience more comfortable and accessible.