Man from City Hall

Night view of the Man with animated eyes looking at the crowd

Daylight view of the Man with his smoking cigar

The Oracle by Bill Wainwright

Question Raiser projected in the Man’s eyes

technicians working on the event

  • Location: Boston City Hall, First Night Celebration, Boston, MA (1989/1990)
  • Client: First Night Boston
  • Size: 97′ x 37′
  • Materials: Billboard construction, scaffolding, lighting, video, and live performance
  • Performers: actors, singers, poets, and percussion ensemble
  • Collaborators: Bill Wainwright, Joan Brigham, Doug & Chris Fitch, Ruth Hamilton, Caleb Sampson and the Alloy Orchestra, and Ken Field
  • Photo Credits: Kathy Chapman
  • Artist: Mags Harries

The Voice from City Hall

A bowler hat and jaw were added to the iconic architecture of Boston’s City Hall, transforming the building into a character in Boston’s First Night festivities for New Years Eve. The design incorporated direct elements of the building’s architecture: the Council Chamber windows were used as the Man’s eyes and a steam vent became the Man’s smoking cigar. Man from City Hall served as a vehicle for audience members to address questions to a second character, The Oracle–created by the artist Bill Wainwright. The performance parodied City Hall politics and confusion of city bureaucracy. changing the windows of the Council Chamber into the Man’s eyes, projected with animated video.

the eyes moving during the performance

The Question Raiser accompanying the Oracle

The Man and the Oracle

Participants from the First Night crowds were raised by scissor lift 30 feet up into the jaw of the Man, the stage from which they addressed The Oracle. While talking, video of the right and left profiles of the Question Raiser were projected into the eyes of the Man as though two people were talking to each other. The Oracle’s responses were created impromptu by a group of poets and issued in a slow ominous voice accompanied by percussions and opera singers. Between questions the animated eyes of the Man perused the crowd below.