Christie 1DLP laser projectors are illuminating ‘Moon Over Kaifeng’s Southern Courtyard’, a night time cultural performance that transforms Kaifeng city in Henan province into a canvas of light, architecture, landscape, and water.
Installed and commissioned by Jianye Display, the large-scale experience is delivered using 24 Christie HS series, Inspire series, and Captiva laser projectors. The cultural tourism project seeks to reawaken Kaifeng, the ancient capital of eight dynasties, after dark by combining immersive projection and live performances to animate a historic government courthouse and a picturesque lake.
Each evening, as drums echo through the city gate tower, a 3D countdown signals the start of the performance. Gauze screens, mountain backdrops, a stone tablet and a majestic hall converge in a carefully choreographed crescendo, culminating in the resounding call of legendary Song Dynasty judge Bao Zheng, also known as Justice Bao: “Ascend the court!”.
At the Heavenly King Hall, the primary performance venue, a 31m-wide by 17m-high projection transforms the grand façade into a living mural. This visual centrepiece is achieved using six HS series laser projectors delivering 19,150 lumens each, bathing the structure in imagery that sets the stage for immersive storytelling rooted in Song Dynasty history.
Flanking the Hall, vivid imagery on gauze screens measuring 16m long and 3m high adds further depth and drama to the live performances. These visuals are seamlessly delivered via rear projection using 10 Captiva DWU500S ultra short throw laser projectors, enveloping audiences with layered, three-dimensional scenes that enhance both scale and intimacy.
In front of the Heavenly King Hall, a monumental stone tablet becomes another powerful storytelling surface. In a striking three-sided projection, two DWU760-iS laser projectors animate the stone with visuals, revealing the Chinese character for “integrity” stroke by stroke, as if etched by time. The projections measure 3.8m wide by 3.5m high across all three sides.
At the rear garden of the historic courthouse, the mirror-like Mingjing Lake takes centre stage. Six HS series laser projectors illuminate a 30m-high by 14m-wide mountain backdrop and a 17m-wide water screen. Used in conjunction with live performances, the visuals unfold like an unfurled scroll, merging water, poetry, and moonlight to celebrate the works of Su Shi, one of China’s most revered Song Dynasty poets.