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Fabulous Fall Festival Rides Again!

Hello, my belly dance friends!

I was invited to rejoin the Fabulous Fall Festival planning committee and I’m now the head Marketeer!  If you’re local to me in the San Francisco/Bay Area region, please consider sharing this graphic with your friends, students, troupe mates, or anyone you feel might like to join us for a day-long belly dance festival.

Join our Mailing List

Now that we’ve booked the hall, our next step is building our mailing list. The last three years have been full of upheavals and challenges for us all. Many folks have changed locations, jobs, and personal infrastructure. Our mission is to rebuild our now fragmented contact list. 

Email Us to update your information or to join us:  FabFallFestInfo@gmail.com 

Drop us a line via email with “Add me to the Mailing List” in the subject line.  Now through the date of the show, I’ll be sending bi-weekly updates – so join the email list today so you won’t miss a single newsletter!

Fabulous Fall Festival Facebook Group 

If you would like the opportunity to interact with your fellow community members and become part of our street team, come join us in our new Facebook group.  In this FB group, the committee will also share notes about our progress in planning this annual event.

Updating the old BABDAMA Website

My next project is to renovate the current BABDAMA website.  Anyone who has worked with a website knows that this is a pretty big project. This will probably occupy my free time for the better part of two weeks as I work with Sudeep, whose giant shoes I’m attempting to fill. For now, the site has outdated information.

Until the new website is up, our event Facebook Group
and our bi-weekly newsletter will be your
best and most accurate source for information about

Fabulous Fall Festival 2023

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Junk Mail – Award Winning Trash Dress

Junk Mail
Trash Dress Sculpture by Dawn Devine
Exhibited at the San Mateo County Fair
Division Winner

Last December, as the year drew to a close, I set some unusual goals. One goal was to “Be how I self-defined.”  This sounds abstract, but it amounts to this:

  • If I call myself a dancer, then I must dance.
  • Do I call myself a writer?  I must write.
  • When I call myself a costumer, I must make costumes.
  • If I call myself a traveler? Then I must travel.
  • Do I call myself an artist? Then I must exhibit my art.

Fast forward to April. I attended Costume Con, a convention devoted to the art of costuming.  At the show, I had the pleasure of seeing Adam Savage give a presentation on costuming and creativity.  During this Q&A session, he said some very inspirational things like “If not now, When?” and “Achieving your dreams is simply deciding to do the work. Show up for you.” But the phrase that got me was, “Always lean into authenticity.”

With these words freshly written in my journal and infusing me with inspiration, May arrived.  One evening when I was chatting with some friends, I decided that this was going to be the year I participated in a group art show. Do I call myself an artist?  Yes!  Then I must exhibit my art.

San Mateo County Fair – Junk Mail

I persuaded my photographer friend Alisha Westerfeld to submit an entry into the photography category of the art show with me. I got the entry book.  Looking over the rules and guidelines for submission, I quickly realized there were dozens of different categories to choose from, so I carefully read the descriptions.

As I read the book, and yes, I’m that gal who reads the whole guide, I spotted “Division 313 – Found Art & Assemblage Art.” At that moment, I knew what I wanted to do. With a flash of inspiration, I wrote down the title  “Junk Mail.”  My first thought?  I was going to sew some window envelopes together with images torn from catalogs and magazines.

I submitted my form on the last day to enter. Then I went to work. I only had two weeks to complete a worthy entry for my first artwork for exhibition in more than 20 years.

Inspirations:
Isabelle de Borchegrave, Junk Mail, and The Tudors

So I spent two days sketching and drawing, thinking and planning and I came up with an idea. Why don’t I embrace the words of Adam Savage and “Lean into Authenticity.”  My authentic inner voice first whispered and then yelled, “Make a dress, make a trash dress!”

I love making historically inspired-costume pieces out of unconventional materials. In my first year of MFA at UC Davis, I built a wall of bras out of dozens of different materials from bubble wrap to fishing lures.  I finished that school year with an installation entitled “Vestments for a New Religion” and exhibited several of the pieces across Northern California. 

Right: “Chausible” from “Vestments for a New Religion” by Dawn Devine at the Olive Hyde Gallery, Fremont, CA

Left: Maria Maddalena d’Austria, 2007, based on a 1622 portrait by Isabelle de Borchegrave
Middle: Marketing Mail from the Legion of Honor for the upcoming exhibition “Tudors”
Right: Miniature of Queen Elizabeth I by Hilliard

I have a vintage plastic display form who’s named Pinky.  You can see her serving as the cover model for Embellished Bras.  She was going to be my muse and I went to work coming up with a dress concept made from envelopes and recycled cardboard.

Isabelle de Borchegrave is a Belgian artist and designer who has inspired me for many years. I attended an exhibition years before and saw her work turning historic paintings into three-dimension paper sculptures of dresses.  I found a piece of junk mail with an historic image and everything fell into place.  I was going to make a Tudor-inspired dress made from upcycled, recycled, and found objects.

It takes a Village to make a Trash Dress

But two weeks?  Could I make a Tudor-themed trash dress in two weeks?   Indeed I could with the help of some friends.  Shout out to redvelvet who donated a couple of boxes of packaging and the critical disposable chopsticks that formed the foundation of the collar. Alisha Westerfeld brought over a massive pile of envelopes I needed to construct the material for the skirt.

But it was Niffer who came over and made tea, wielded scissors, tape, and the almighty glue gun and helped build the structure of this project.  Niffer was available and the two of us put in a total of about 55 hours cutting, sewing, gluing, folding, dying, draping, and building the 9 layers that compose this piece. I am indebted to Niffer for all of the hard work.  If you’re reading this, thank you Niffer!

Junk Mail takes the Division Championship

We took her up to the fair and set her up, slowly dressing her and taking a slew of photographs.  I gave her a final little preen, crossed my fingers, and wished her good luck on her adventure.  Two weeks later, our crew went to check out how she did.  Not only did she win second in her class, she leaped the first place to take the division title!  She won not one, but two ribbons. I was shocked, amazed, thrilled, and mostly felt extremely validated. I can reclaim the title of exhibiting artist. 

Now Junk Mail, the dress is tucked into my closet. Pinky is wearing an assiut tunic and hanging out in my guest room patiently waiting for her next ensemble.  As for me, my next goal is to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Costuming from the Hip, by giving her a makeover.  My first book has gone through three revisions over the past decades, but this time, she’s going to expand, get a glow-up with a batch of new illustrations, photographs, and diagrams. 

So I’m off to the drawing board!  
Happy Dance and Costuming,
Dawn Devine ~ Davina
June 2023

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“What Writers Read” in Fanoos Magazine

“What Writers Read”
Recommended Belly Dance Books

Over the past 6 weeks, I’ve been completely focused on the Bibliography of my next book. My current publishing project is a top-to-bottom rewrite and expansion of “Costuming from the Hip.” We are doing this rewrite to celebrate its 30-year anniversary.  30 years!  Wow!

Fanoos Magazine

When I heard the summer topic of Fanoos was writing about dance, I had to contribute! I decided to share some of my favorite resources from my current project. If you click through using this link, you can find a sampler from this bibliography. Want to know my essential belly dance reads for 2023?  Click through to my article, “What Writers Read” for more info.

Written By Dancers for Dancers

I have enjoyed reading and writing for the quarterly e-magazine Fanoos. Written by belly dancers for belly dancers, the curated content entertains, informs, and inspires.

Many of the top industry thought leaders, researchers, performers, and instructors contribute to Fanoos. I look forward to reading every issue. 

Fanoos is Free

The best part of Fanoos Magazine is that it’s free to subscribers. Quarterly newsletters arrive in your email.  Not a subscriber?  Click through and sign up to receive notification of their next issue of Fanoos!

Now, to make some tea and read the latest issue,
Happy Costuming & Dance,
~ Dawn Devine ~ Davina
June 2023

 

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The Bibliography Expansion Continues

Costuming from the Hip: 30th Anniversary Edition is in progressing at a pretty steady clip!  Over the next two weeks, my prime goal is to finish updating and expanding the bibliography.

My mission for this project is to create a more complete, modernized, and, frankly, more useful book. To serve this mission, I’m crafting the bibliography to serve as the research tool I wish I had when I started. It will function as a jumping-off point for future costume designers, historians, and scholars of belly dance.  

Haven’t read “Costuming from the Hip”, the current edition is available on Amazon.com or on direct from me via my Etsy store.   

Can we get this revision and expansion done before the end of the year?  Be sure to subscribe to my newsletter.

Thanks for joining me on this
costuming and publishing adventure!

Dawn Devine ~ Davina
June 2023

 

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Six Books that Inspired “Costuming from the Hip”

 

Six Books that Inspired “Costuming From the Hip”

I am working on the 30th-anniversary rewrite of my classic 1993 book, “Costuming From the Hip.”  Wheee…  This project was on my agenda for 2022, but life got a little out of hand, and here we are in 2023 setting other projects on the back burner.  Our mission is to get this new edition done by the end of this year or in early ’24.

Part of this process involves working through my own archive and research collection.  In this video, I share the six books that directly inspired the creation of my book way back in 1992.  Costuming From the Hip grew from this inspiration with the help of my growing collection of class handouts and research notes.

I’m thrilled that editor Nancy Hay, and my co-author and photographer Alisha Westerfeld will join me on this adventure!  We’re working together to update, modernize, and expand on the information, illustrations, and photos of the original version.

Yes, you read that. The new edition of CFTH will feature photos of dancers in costumes!  

It’s an exciting time here in Studio Davina.
I look forward to sharing more progress reports in the coming weeks.

Dawn Devine ~ Davina
March, 2023