Member Login
Explore More Fun

Want deeper fun? Visit deepFUN.com!

Got Games? Want more? Read Major Fun's game reviews

Main Menu
Home
Games Archives
News Archives
Game Feed / RSS
FAQs
Who's Online
None
To Do
The Junkfest - A Celebration of Play, Community, Arts and Athletics PDF Print E-mail
Written by Bernie DeKoven   
Friday, 25 May 2007

JunkFest sign

Philip Ella Juico is the author of an article called "Sports for All" in the Philippine Star. The article was the result of several exchanges we had over the previous months, about bringing sports to the far reaches of the Philippines. Dr. Juico was very active with the major sports organizations in the Philippines, and, because he had access to some of the major players, he thought about organizing a tour in which they would run demonstration games in the nation's villages. This led to many fascinating conversations, a wonderful meeting, and, ultimately, my crafting the following proposal for:

The Junkfest: an event to affirm the human capacity to play

A Celebration of Play - a public gathering that combines spectacle with empowerment, that provides a platform for the display of both athletic and artistic achievement, while providing an invitation to equal participation by all members of the community - all genders, ages, abilities - to everyone who wants to play.

A Celebration of Play - celebrating genius in body, mind and spirit; genius in sports, in individual and team performance, in individual and collective art and invention, in music and dance.

A Junkfest!

The invitation to play:

Aside from being perhaps the first public event to incorporate sports and arts, the Junkfest is also probably the first public festival that is created entirely with found materials. All the art is made of scrap, all the music is played on instruments made of scrap, even the sports equipment is made entirely from scrap.

Scrap. Found objects. Discarded materials. All free, local, accessible to anyone. No one too poor to be an artist or musician. No one too poor to play.

Along with economic access comes equal access. No one is too disabled to play. Or too old or too young to play. Or too weak. Or the wrong gender or race or nationality. Everyone can afford to play. Everyone is good enough to play. The invitation to play is available to anyone who wants to accept it.

The event:

Taking place in a large, open public area - a local playfield, a town square, a street - large enough to accommodate:

  • three different games, played simultaneously - all variations on popular sports
  • three different scrap-instrument bands with dancing area
  • galleries for displaying, and creating scrap art, scrap toys, scrap instruments
  • Junk Swap tables where junk hunters display and exchange found treasures 


The games areas are surrounded by shops, galleries, workshops, and music areas. The galleries all feature work of local artists, and all the works are made from scrap materials. Works include: sculptures, mobiles, collages, clothes, toys, musical instruments, etc. The workshops are staffed by local artisans as well as by nationally recognized artists and musicians. There, festival-goers can make their own scrap creations, under the guidance of local and national masters, and offer them for sale at any of the stores or galleries. In the music areas, participants can listen, dance, or join in the music-making.

As you enter the games areas, you see people sitting and watching other people at play. There's a lot of laughing, because the players are using a ball the kids made by out of rags and plastic bags. The goals are made of scrap. The field is marked with scrap. The game itself seems to be some kind of soccer game, only there are two balls (a big one and a small one) and three goals (a wide one and a narrow one and narrower one), a player in a wheelchair and one on crutches, a 6-year-old boy and a teen-age girl. You sit to watch, and almost immediately someone comes up to you and asks if you want to join the game, or perhaps start a new game in one of the adjacent play areas.

 

Athletes and Artists

Sports have a great power to bring people together. If star athletes and renown artists are part of the festival, they can be the bridge to a very profound empowerment. For many, just getting to see these famous players in person is reason enough to come to the festival. For others, actually getting to play with them is an experience that they will remember for the rest of their lives. For the athletes and artists, it's an experience of giving, of using their great fame to make sports more accessible to kids and community, and, most significantly, of deep and lasting fun.

Some sample Junkyard Games:

  • Giant Pick-Up Sticks: (see this
  • Hoseball Horsehoes - elevated horseshoe-like targets are constructed out of cardboard cartons. The cartons are laid on their sides so that it is possible to see how successful a throw has been. Targets are cut out of the center of the top side of each carton.  Hoseballs must be flung high enough to drop into the target on top of the cartons.
  • Giant Blocks made from big cardboard cartons - as many as you can get. Build castles, forts, apartment complexes, mazes....
  • Three-way Volleyball -  three volleyball nets (made of perhaps long-sleeve shirts, tied together by their sleeves) - tied to one pole in the middle, and three poles at each end. A large bubblebag for the ball. Perhaps several large bubblebags.
  • Giant Skelly - chalk in a very large Skelly court, use garbage can lids for pieces, move them with brooms.
  • Junkyard Baseball - perhaps Broom Baseball

Some benefits:

  • Inviting equal participation from people of all ages, abilities, and cultures, the festival itself becomes a model for an equitable society, where individuals are honored for their accomplishments, regardless of gender, age, body type, physical limitations.
  • Seeing and playing with local artists and athletes is an invitation and inspiration for participation in sports and arts. Playing informally, with adapted rules, and a focus clearly more on play than on winning, demonstrates how sports and arts can involve everyone who wants to play.
  • Involving the use of scrap materials, the festival demonstrates and validates ecological awareness and the value of reuse. Because scrap materials are free, it also removes barriers between the various levels of affluence within a community.
  • The festival gives credence and honor to the things that get made out of the discarded - the art made out of findings and fittings and scrap, the music made with sticks and tin cans, the toys made out of bottle tops, the sports played with balls made out of shopping bags. This, in turn, encourages local artisans, musicians, and, of course, children, to value the things they create out of scrap.
  • Promoting the sale of the scrap works of local artisans directly promotes entrepreneurial growth. Promoting the purchase and creation of scrap-built arts and crafts virtually eliminates economic barriers for any artisan or craftsperson.
  • The few hours in which everyone is involved in playing sports, dancing, making music, creating art, are hours in which the entire community is at peace, at play, empowered.


Organization and development:

Much of the organization and development of a Celebration of Junk should be conducted at the local level - local sports organizations, youth organizations, art and cultural organizations. Once the star athletes are lined up, advanced publicity begins with the organization of scrap-collecting efforts from all over the community, especially those involving any businesses that regularly produce significant amounts of scrap.

In the mean time, athletes, artists, musicians with national recognition, and those known only locally, are identified and invited to participate as well as help support the event. Regular announcements to the press help publicize both the event and the star attractions. Wherever possible, all who stand to benefit financially from the event - local artisans who will be displaying their work for sale - should be encouraged to produce scrap-based works of art and craft and to be available for scrap workshops.

Some time before the event, participating athletes will need a guided workshop, exploring the idea of scrap-based games (a.k.a. Junkyard Sports) together, and designing a few to play at the festival - stressing that the games must be able to accommodate a wide range of players with an even wider range of abilities.

 

See also this and this  




Bookmark this page
Digg!Reddit!Del.icio.us!Google!Facebook!Slashdot!Technorati!StumbleUpon!Newsvine!Furl!Fark!Blogmarks!Yahoo!Ma.gnolia!Squidoo!
Last Updated ( Saturday, 15 December 2007 )
 
Next >