A project by Emilio Martínez Poppe

MAY 23 – JUNE 11, 2025

A timely and ambitious public artwork highlighting Philadelphia’s municipal workers and their perspectives on the city will be on view in the City Hall Courtyard.

Civic Views is a temporary public art project celebrating the city’s municipal employees and their diverse perspectives on Philadelphia through poetic documentation of their office windows. The project represents the culmination of two years of Emilio Martínez Poppe photographing and interviewing staff from an array of Philadelphia civic agencies. Presented in Philadelphia’s City Hall Courtyard, Civic Views is accompanied by a robust series of public programs highlighting the work of scholars, labor organizers, elected officials, and city employees as they articulate the importance of the public sector. The project’s centerpiece, an expansive installation of photographs, text, and scaffolding, will be on view in the City Hall Courtyard from May 23 – June 11, 2025.

Civic Views combines photographs of city government office windows and excerpts from interviews with a wide range of civil servants to map their diverse views on a changing Philadelphia. Photographs are reproduced at a 1-to-1 scale and hung to exact specifications that replicate the experience of looking out of each window, opening these tucked-away offices to the public’s view. The photographs are paired with a selection of anonymous interview excerpts on text panels that highlight the pride, complexity, and even contradictions endemic to public sector work. The interviews chart how employees came to work for city government, reflections on the work they perform, how family and friends perceive their careers, and their wishes for Philadelphia and its citizens. These elements are mounted on a series of scaffolding armatures that create an abstracted map of Philadelphia and orient the public to where these buildings are located across the city. Taken together, the project endeavors to humanize the public sector while using scaffolding to symbolize the public attitudes and urban landscape that are constantly changing in the background of the city government’s work.

Emilio Martínez Poppe holding Joseph Saxton’s 1839 Philadelphia Central High School for Boys and Pennsylvania State Arsenal daguerreotype. Photo by the artist, courtesy of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania

In a moment when the public sector is increasingly vulnerable to scrutiny, restructuring, and privatization, Civic Views champions the people, buildings, and ethics that keep city government running. The project seeks to shake off a monolithic view of government to better understand it at a human scale, hoping to reignite a deep value for what we call “public.” Like many of Mural Arts Philadelphia’s projects, Civic Views presents thoughtful ways for experiencing public art as an interdisciplinary effort engaged in many conversations at once—history, urbanism, photography, architecture, civil service, and public space.

The full scope of the project includes visits to over twenty municipal agencies, over thirty staff interviews and over forty window views. The project has been produced in close collaboration with the City of Philadelphia, which has graciously opened its doors to Martínez Poppe’s camera and microphone.

After its debut in the City Hall Courtyard, a selection of Civic Views photographs will migrate across the street to long-term public view at the Municipal Services Building’s Concourse Level in partnership with the Department of Public Property. The project will also lead to a substantial book documenting the full index of photographs Martínez Poppe captured, as well as essays from leading artists, scholars, and the project’s organizers exploring art’s relationship to the city. The book project will be announced with additional details later this year.

Civic Views is organized by Jameson Paige, Curator of Public Practice.

Emilio Martínez Poppe, Department of Public Property, East, 2024. Photograph courtesy of the artist.
Philadelphia’s civil servants are as diverse as the city they work for. While the journey to public service is varied, the commitment to it is shared by the individuals I interviewed across a vast array of positions.
— Emilio Martínez Poppe

City Agencies included in Civic Views

Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority

City Archives

City Planning Commission

Creative Philadelphia

Department of Behavioral Health and Intellectual disAbility Services

Department of Parks and Recreation

Department of Public Property

Department of Revenue

Department of Streets (Sanitation)

District Attorney’s Office

Fire Department

Free Library of Philadelphia

Office of Children and Families

Office of Economic Opportunity

Office of the Mayor

Office of Transportation, Infrastructure and Sustainability

Philadelphia City Council

Philadelphia Housing Authority

Philadelphia Police Department

Philadelphia Water Department

School District of Philadelphia

 

Emilio Martínez Poppe photographing a window at the Housing Authority. Photo courtesy of Jameson Paige.

Civic Views Public Programming

Opening Reception

Friday, May 23  |   12 PM – 3 PM  |  City Hall Courtyard

Speaking program and performance by the Municipal Employees Choral Ensemble. Light lunch will be served in celebration of the Memorial Day holiday weekend.

 

Panel Discussion: The Image of the City

Wednesday, May 28  |   5:30 PM – 7 PM  |  City Hall Courtyard

A conversation on photography’s relationship to the public’s imagination of the urban landscape, local photographic history, and the diverse powers of representation. This talk will include Dr. Michelle Smiley and Smithsonian curator Dr. LaCharles Ward.

 

Public Sector Office workshop

Friday, May 30  |   5:30 PM – 7 PM  |  City Hall Courtyard

Public Sector Office, a self-organized group of current and former public sector employees, will lead a workshop for local civil servants that reflects on each participant’s findings of eccentric and idiosyncratic artifacts in government offices. The workshop will be followed by a happy hour at a neighborhood bar.

 

City Hall Serenade

Monday, June 2  |   12 PM – 12:30 PM  |  City Hall Courtyard

Performance by members of the Municipal Employees Choral Ensemble.

 

Panel Discussion: The Form of the City

Wednesday, June 4  |   5:30 PM – 7 PM  |  City Hall Courtyard

A conversation between State Senator Nikil Saval and art and urban studies scholar Dr. Shannon Mattern on the architecture, design, and infrastructure of the city. They will discuss the reflexive relationship between spaces of civil servant work, the maintenance and delivery of public services, and the shifting perception of the public sector.

 

City Hall Serenade

Monday, June 9  |   12 PM – 12:30 PM  |  City Hall Courtyard

Performance by members of the Municipal Employees Choral Ensemble.

 

Panel Discussion: The Labor of the City and Closing Reception

Wednesday, June 11  |  5:30 PM – 8 PM  |  City Hall Courtyard

A conversation championing the work of public sector employees led by labor organizer Paul Prescod. Conversation is followed by a Closing Reception for Civic Views, including a brief speaking program and performance by the Municipal Employees Choral Ensemble.

 

Read the blog about this project, which includes an interview with the artist.

About the Artist

Emilio Martínez Poppe is an artist who is concerned with the right to the city and the struggle of public memory. Through a social and research-led practice spanning photography, sculpture, text, and installations, he explores the spatial mechanisms and ideological conditions that reproduce state and capital infrastructures. Martínez Poppe has previously exhibited work at Petrine, Paris; the Queens Museum, New York; Tiger Strikes Asteroid, Philadelphia; and de Brakke Grond, Amsterdam. Martínez Poppe earned an MFA and MCP from the University of Pennsylvania, a BFA from The Cooper Union School of Art, was a studio fellow in the Whitney Independent Study Program, and a member of BFAMFAPhD. He is a member of the Pinko collective and a Visiting Assistant Professor in the Graduate Communications Design department at Pratt Institute. His work has been supported through artist residencies at Abrons Arts Center, Pratt Institute, NEW INC, SOMA Mexico, and through grants/fellowships from The Laundromat Project, The Sachs Program for Arts Innovation, PennPraxis, and the UPenn Graduate and Professional Student Assembly. Martínez Poppe received the Charles Addams Memorial Prize and the Paul Davidoff Award from the University of Pennsylvania.

 

Emilio Martínez Poppe, City Planning Commission, South, 2024. Photograph courtesy of the artist.

 

For more information or inquiries on public programs, please contact Jameson Paige, Curator of Public Practice, at jameson.paige@muralarts.org

This project is funded by the City of Philadelphia and ArtBridge.

Learn more about this artwork and many others on the Public Art Archive.
Next Up: To Be Continued Part 1
Next Up: To Be Continued Part 1