New Suns: Finding Flow
Issue 13 features eleven Disability Fellows reflecting on the passage of time to find our way in, with, and through it to wherever it takes us next.

What comes next?
The eleven contributors to the final issue of New Suns are all awardees of the Disability Futures Fellowship, a three cycle initiative that asked the question of “What comes next?” at the time of its creation six years ago. Now at its conclusion, having awarded sixty incredible Fellows, we are again, of course, at the crux of that question. So how do we as a community of creatives best attempt to answer it?
The artists here offer a stewardship of the past to the present, and as you maneuver through the contributions you can find openings to paths of futures we need and want. Finding Flow, the title of the issue, suggests that we are doing just that — reflecting on the passage of time to find our way in, with, and through it to wherever it takes us next. To create a present and future memory, artists are tapping into ancestral and land-based knowledge, digging deeper into archives to tell stories that have not been told, blurring and stretching time in collaged sound through recordings, and reflecting on how we spend our time in creating, making, resting, nourishing — alone and in community.
As the Disability Futures Fellowship sunsets, we can grasp that the wisdom flowing through Disability Futures Fellows’ sharing will ripple out in our worlds, towards the feelings and futures we want to find ourselves in.
Ezra Benus
Disability Futures Manager / Guest Editor
About New Suns
New Suns is USA's online publication of commissions, experiences, and stories from artists responding to life and the world around them. Each issue centers the curious-minded ways creative practitioners challenge and reconfigure established frameworks through play, conversation, reflection, and speculation. New Suns encourages learning from and listening with the individuals behind the art.
About Disability Futures
Disability Futures aimed to increase the visibility of disabled creative practitioners across disciplines and geography, and amplify their voices individually and collectively. Launched in 2020 by the Ford Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the initiative supported 60 disabled creative practitioners throughout its duration with unrestricted funding.
Related artists
-
JJJJJerome Ellis
Composer and Poet
-
Finnegan Shannon
Artist
-
Emily Sara
Artist and Designer
-
Naomi Ortiz
Poet, Writer, and Visual Artist
-
Eli Clare
Poet, Essayist, and Activist
-
Luz Guerra
Activist-writer, Storyteller, and Historian
-
Tourmaline
Artist
-
Christine Bruno
Actor, Teaching Artist, and Disability Equity Consultant
-
Dickie Hearts
Actor
-
Natasha Ofili
Actress, Writer, Director, and Filmmaker
-
Jen Deerinwater
Classically Trained Vocalist, Multimedia Investigative Reporter, and Narrative Non-fiction Writer