InclusiVibe Foundation

InclusiVibe Foundation

An open piano with sheet music on the stand.

How Artists & Volunteers Can Help with Fundraising

InclusiVibe is built on community. We want our artists and volunteers to feel safe, respected, and empowered when helping us raise funds.

Here’s how you can participate:

Colorful abstract painting on an easel, with paint supplies and brushes on a small table nearby, in a well-lit art studio with windows showing greenery outside.

Ways You Can Help

  • Share our campaign → Post the official donation link on your social media, in your newsletters, or with your friends/family.

  • Be a Story Ambassador → Join a short video, podcast clip, or written spotlight about why InclusiVibe matters.

  • Host a Peer-to-Peer Page → With our support, set up your own personalized fundraising page through our platform (BetterWorld) so your network can give directly.

  • Spread the Word at Events → Hand out flyers, invite friends to concerts, or share links during performances.

  • Bring in Ideas → Suggest creative ways to reach new audiences — every artist and volunteer brings unique networks and energy!

Visibility as part of a movement transforming access in music and medicine.

  • Professional credit as an Artist Ambassador or Volunteer Fundraiser.

  • A community of peers committed to advocacy and inclusion.

  • The knowledge that you are directly powering change.

Voices of Disabled Musician & Artist

Every disabled artist has a story that extends beyond the stage — a story told in notes, brushstrokes, words, and lived experience.

Here, we center the voices of musicians and artists navigating disability — not as a side note, but as the main theme.

Whether performing on stage, composing from a hospital bed, or painting between therapy sessions, these artists create in ways that challenge stereotypes and redefine artistry.

  • In-depth audio or video conversations with patients, clinicians, and advocates. These interviews give your perspectives of patient’s real experiences, raw reflections, and the details that often get lost in medical charts.


    Where you’ll find it:
    Listen on our podcast feed or watch recorded interviews right here on the site.

  • Live or recorded music performances created in collaboration with patients. Each piece is inspired by their journey and paired with narrative storytelling, so the art becomes part of the advocacy.


    Where you’ll be involved in it:
    Watch full performance videos or excerpts alongside the patient’s own words, images, and film. Be inspired for participate the next work.

  • 3–4 minute short films blending patient narratives with visual storytelling. Perfect for sharing on social media, these films capture key moments — from medical milestones to stage debuts.


    Where you’ll find it:
    View directly on our site or across our YouTube and social channels.

  • Written stories: personal essays documenting patient stories, advocacy updates, and behind-the-scenes moments. Some stand alone as written pieces; others are paired with performances or interviews.

    Where you’ll find it:
    Read them here in the Chronicles archive — each story with its own dedicated page.

Stories

Stories of Disabled Musicians, Artists, & Creative Individuals

Stories Stories of Disabled Musicians, Artists, & Creative Individuals

Interior view of a modern auditorium or concert hall with multiple rows of gray seats and wooden flooring, featuring a balcony with a black railing and decorative textured walls illuminated by warm lighting.

Amy W.

🎻Violinist, quadriplegic

A female singer passionately performing on stage, singing into a microphone with her eyes closed and her right hand raised. She has red hair, tattoos on her arms, and is wearing a red and black outfit with a red scarf.

Amanda L.

Singer, Leukemia

A young man in a dark suit playing a violin indoors.

Ryan H.

🎻Violinist, Rheumatoid Arthritis

Share your work & your life.

Your art can shift perspectives, reshape stages, and redefine what’s possible.

By sharing your story in Voices of Disabled Musicians & Artists, you not only showcase your craft but also open doors for inclusion, innovation, and change. Together, we make creativity more accessible — and uncertainty less frightening.

Click for Submission Form

Increase our visibility.

Make us audible

Help Donate the New Concert Stories
Orchestra members playing violins, viewed from above, with sheet music on stands in front of them.

Support This Work

Help us Amplify Their Voices

Every patient story we produce — whether as a performance, podcast, or short film — requires time, resources, and care.
Your donation funds the artists, filmmakers, and accessibility services that bring these stories to life and make them available to the world.