Our Story.
ORIGIN
In 2009, a friend dragged theater artist Aaron Landsman to a Portland, Oregon City Council Meeting. Aaron thought it would be boring, something to get through. And for a little while, it was. He wondered when it would be okay to leave.
Soon, he noticed the stage was arranged like a theater; he saw people speak passionately about their concerns for the city; he saw the rituals of time and space that governed the meeting. Aaron realized this was some of the best theater he’d seen all year.
City Council Meeting
Trenton, NJ, 2023
THE SHOW
With director Mallory Catlett he created a participatory performance called City Council Meeting, in which audience members enacted transcripts from local government meetings around the country, and political adversaries in the community created artistic responses to shared challenges.
From 2012-2014, City Council Meeting was presented in five US cities, in collaboration with schools, non-profits, arts presenters, funders and organizers.
In two cities, local collaborators ran for public office.

Assata Richards
City Council Candidate, Houston, TX
Marcelino Quinonez
State Legislature, Phoenix, AZ
THE BOOK

Mallory and Aaron wrote the book The City We Make Together and Aaron started teaching a popular first-year seminar based on the work at Princeton.
THE WORKING GROUP
In 2016, to continue growing this work, Aaron formed Perfect City, a multi-generational working group, in his home neighborhood on the Lower East Side.
Perfect City started with a simple understanding: young people who grow up in cities are born urban planners — they ride subways before they are born; they understand invisible and visible boundaries of belonging. But pathways to the field are limited.
Together we evolved tools, principles and programs that became Perfect City.
Perfect City Avoidance Mapping
at the Venice Architecture Biennale, 2025
THE NETWORK
Today, with partners from the National Civic League, to Princeton University and the Christina Seix Academy, from Abrons Arts Center to the Dayton Public Library, Perfect City is growing into a network of sites.
We see governance as a creative practice. We shift apathy into civic action by investing in an intergenerational network of change-makers committed to energizing civic life.
Perfect City envisions a future where belonging, creativity, and joy facilitate the well-being of the people, the planet, and policy-making.
Avoidance/Belonging Mapping
at the Under the Radar Festival, 2026
THE PEOPLE
The People.









