"John Cena meets Jesus" is how artist and disabled advocate Jordan Valageorgiou describes the sheer variety of art on show at the new Bathurst Regional Art Gallery exhibition Acts of Inheritance.The show, curated by Valageorgiou, features the work of 17 disabled artists from We Are Studios, an artist-led collective based in Blacktown, Western Sydney.Animated by the idea of identity as something we both create and inherit, the works include a music video by Jane Thatcher, an installation exploring wrestling culture by Timothy W Martin and jewellery by Adrienne Proud.Valageorgiou, a co-founder of We Are Studios, says it is important to include a range of perspectives and styles to capture the diversity of how people experience disability."For us, it's about the vitality of each of us as studio artists within a collective, being able to explore material, scale and emotions and to participate in a dialogue that otherwise we might not be a part of."When an early visitor called Acts of Inheritance a "self-indulgent" exhibition, Valageorgiou was, perhaps surprisingly, delighted by the critique."That's the most beautiful thing; it's exactly what we're looking for," he says."It's vital that Disabled artists are taken at face value and are given the opportunity to demonstrate their worth The artists may be neurodiverse, Deaf, living with mental health challenges or experiencing chronic health conditions.Acts of Inheritance is also an exhibition about Western Sydney