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Projection mapping went through a phase where it overwhelmed every show it appeared in — over-bright, over-busy, drowning out the performers it was meant to support. In 2026 the mature use of projection is the opposite: subtle, atmospheric, and in service of the human bodies on stage.

The Three Uses That Work

Atmosphere — gentle, slow-moving textures that build the world without competing for attention. Narrative — projection that advances the story (a tomb opening, a sky changing, a memory surfacing). Architecture — projection that transforms the venue itself, particularly powerful in historic buildings.

The Three Uses That Don’t

Music-video sync — projection that pulses with the beat reads as low-budget concert visuals. Logo display — projecting sponsor logos turns the audience off. Compensatory spectacle — using projection to mask weak choreography. The audience always notices.

The Lighting Conflict

Projection and stage lighting fight each other unless designed together. We brief LDs and projection designers as a single team — their plots are merged into one master document before tech week begins.

The Throw Distance Problem

Projection requires distance. Low-ceiling venues kill projection. Site-survey early to avoid promising a projection-heavy show in a venue that can’t host it.

Where We’re Going

Real-time generative projection (driven by performer movement) is the next horizon. We’ve tested it in two shows. Results are promising but the technology is still rehearsal-fragile. By 2027 it will be production-ready.

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