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Updated: June 14, 2024 @ 2:45 am
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Visitors sit on a bench and admire the changing scenes projected across walls and the floor of Vincent Van Gogh’s work as a part of the “Beyond Van Gogh” exhibit in North Charleston on Monday, July 18, 2022.
- File/Henry Taylor/Staff
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Visitors watching the video on display in the immersion room experience the projectors and screens used to show petals whirling around at the “Beyond Van Gogh” exhibit in North Charleston on Monday, July 18, 2022. Henry Taylor/Staff
- By Henry Taylor htaylor@postandcourier.com
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Janet Morgan
MYRTLE BEACH — Then with heavy strokes, he created movement in the sky, streets and fields.
Beginning June 21, visitors can move through some 300 works in ”Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience” at Myrtle Beach’s Broadway at the Beach.
Post-impressionist Van Gogh, the Dutch painter, is known for Starry Night, Almond Blossoms, Cafe’ Terrace at Night, Wheatfield with Crows, Irises and several self-portraits all painted in the late 1800s.
The immersive show is a projection of some of Van Gogh’s work on walls, floors and ceilings, allowing the public to linger through and with the strokes.
The show, which continues through Sept. 22, also includes an education room with letters written to Van Gogh’s brother Theo.
The show has been in more than 60 markets, including Charleston, since it began in 2017.
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The light show uses four trillion pixels to capture the paintings’ detail with 40-plus projectors and will occupy 30,000 square feet in the space at Celebrity Circle within the shopping center.
Ticket prices are about $33 for general admission and almost $30 in advance. Ticket prices for children, ages 5-15, are almost $23 on the same day and nearly $20 in advance. Ticket prices for seniors, veterans and locals is nearly $28 on same day and almost $25 in advance.
The show is produced by Paquin Entertainment Group, which operates in Canada and Nashville. It is involved in representing and managing artists as well as producing exhibits.
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Sitting on 350 acres of what was once a dense forest, Broadway at the Beach opened in 1995 and has become one of the state’s top tourist destinations for dining, entertainment and shopping — seeing an estimated 13 million visitors annually.
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Janet Morgan
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