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Last admissions to the Museum: NOV-FEB 9 p.m. | MAR-APR 10 p.m. | MAY-AUG 11 p.m. | SEP-OCT 10 p.m. Due to frequent sell-out nights, advance ticket purchase is highly recommended.
Opening times this week:
Monday
2pm - 10pm
Tuesday
2pm - 10pm
Wednesday
2pm - 10pm
Thursday
2pm - 10pm
Friday
2pm - 10pm
Saturday
2pm - 10pm
Sunday
2pm - 10pm
Last admissions to the Museum: NOV-FEB 9 p.m. | MAR-APR 10 p.m. | MAY-AUG 11 p.m. | SEP-OCT 10 p.m. Due to frequent sell-out nights, advance ticket purchase is highly recommended.
Opening times this week:
Monday
2pm - 10pm
Tuesday
2pm - 10pm
Wednesday
2pm - 10pm
Thursday
2pm - 10pm
Friday
2pm - 10pm
Saturday
2pm - 10pm
Sunday
2pm - 10pm
Last admissions to the Museum: NOV-FEB 9 p.m. | MAR-APR 10 p.m. | MAY-AUG 11 p.m. | SEP-OCT 10 p.m. Due to frequent sell-out nights, advance ticket purchase is highly recommended.
Opening times this week:
Monday
2pm - 10pm
Tuesday
2pm - 10pm
Wednesday
2pm - 10pm
Thursday
2pm - 10pm
Friday
2pm - 10pm
Saturday
2pm - 10pm
Sunday
2pm - 10pm

Brilliant! Jackpot

AN AUDIOVISUAL IMMERSIVE EXPERIENCE

Available as an add-on to your Evening Admission
Show runtime: 45 minutes

Brilliant! Jackpot, created by artist Craig Winslow, redefines the way we explore the STORY of Las Vegas. This immersive experience reanimates 40 monumental examples of The Neon Museum’s iconic vintage signs and transports visitors into the history of Las Vegas through sight and sound. Brilliant! Jackpot, takes place in our North Gallery and is the largest augmented reality experience of its kind.

The show utilizes 24 3D-sound speakers and eight projectors to create a 360-degree audiovisual experience. Two climate-controlled towers, designed to resemble the classic Champagne-bubble cylinder from the iconic Flamingo Las Vegas Hotel and Casino, house the projectors, which are aligned at precise angles to cover the entirety of the North Gallery space. To create the projections used to give the impression the signs have been re-electrified, Winslow took a combination of flat photography, drone video, and 3D photogrammetry, all used as references to recreate each sign, bulb by bulb. He then used a process called structured light scanning to obtain a precise view of the projectors’ output, before fine-tuning the content to perfectly align to the actual surfaces—the bulbs, bent metal and broken neon tubes of the signs in the gallery. This process, known as projection mapping, aligns digital animations to the physical world, allowing signs that have not been illuminated for decades to shine once again.

 

BOOK BRILLIANT! JACKPOT WITH EVENING ADMISSION