Editor’s Note: RVA Magazine is partnering with the Virginia Museum of History & Culture on coverage related to America’s 250th anniversary, including Richmond SailFest and IllumiNation.
It’s hard to impress people with just a building. We’re all carrying around phones capable of showing us whatever we want at any moment. Yet standing in front of the Virginia Museum of History & Culture last week during a test run for IllumiNATION, I found myself just staring.
It was grand, immersive, and for a moment made me feel more Virginian than maybe ever. Our state sits dead center in the American narrative. The country’s greatest ideals were debated here, fought over here, and in many cases paid for with blood here. And admittedly, so were some of its greatest failures.
Watching that history unfold across the museum’s facade, you walk away reminded that America wasn’t built somewhere else. A lot of it happened right here, on the same ground we drive across every day without giving it much thought.
For four nights, June 25 through 28, the museum’s entire front facade will become an 18,000-square-foot canvas for a 20-minute projection mapping experience that uses the building itself as part of the storytelling. Historic paintings, landscapes, figures, and pivotal moments from the American story transform the museum into something that feels equal parts history lesson, public art installation, and community gathering.
The projection bends the architecture to its will. Columns disappear, windows become portals, and entire scenes emerge from the building before dissolving back into stone. The result is an immersive experience that turns one of Richmond’s most recognizable landmarks into a living piece of history.
The technology is impressive and the scale is even more impressive but what makes IllumiNATION interesting is the timing.






IllumiNation renders courtesy of Virginia Museum of History & Culture
America’s 250th anniversary arrives at a moment when the country is once again arguing with itself about what America means. Patriotism can feel complicated, history can feel contested, and every symbol has political baggage. But anyone familiar with American history knows this is hardly new. We’ve been arguing about the nation’s identity, its promises, and its shortcomings since the day it was founded.
IllumiNATION largely sidesteps those debates as the museum isn’t trying to referee America’s arguments. Instead, the production focuses on the broader story of the country and the people who shaped it. The goal is less about convincing visitors what to think and more about creating a shared experience around a shared history.
For Virginians, there is also a local layer to the event. Much of the nation’s founding story happened here. The people, places, and ideas that shaped the United States are woven throughout Virginia’s landscape. Whatever your feelings about the country’s present moment, it’s difficult to deny the Commonwealth’s outsized role in how the American story began.
The projection captures that sense of scale. It moves between intimate moments and larger historical narratives, blending artwork, imagery, music, and pyrotechnics into something that feels less like a museum exhibit and more like a civic spectacle.
Around the projection itself, the VMHC campus will host a free block party each evening from 6 to 9 p.m. with live music, food trucks, cultural demonstrations, after-hours museum access, family activities, living history presentations, and local community partners.
Bio Ritmo, Erin & the Wildfire, The Wilson Springs Hotel, and No BS! Brass will each headline one night of the celebration with the projection playing nightly at 9 p.m.
History doesn’t always have to be a debate. Sometimes it can simply be an opportunity to gather together, look up at something larger than ourselves, and remember that despite all our disagreements, we’re still part of the same ongoing story.
And if the test run was any indication, you’ll leave with a little awe, a little perspective, and maybe even a renewed appreciation for the strange, messy, unfinished project that is America.
More information on IllumiNATION can be found HERE.
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