Skip to content
  • X

Subscribe

Magazine | Newsletters
  • Food & Drink
  • News
  • Culture
  • Style
  • Home
  • Family
  • Wellness
  • Things to Do
  • Travel
  • Best of NoVA
  • Best Restaurants
  • Most Influential
  • Top High Schools
  • In This Issue
  • Home
    • Things to Do
  • Shenandoah Valley Exhibit Connects Visitors to Nature Using Lego Bricks
  • Things to Do

Shenandoah Valley Exhibit Connects Visitors to Nature Using Lego Bricks

Sean Kenney’s intricate art installation blends the popular building blocks with natural settings.

By Barbara Bean-Mellinger May 16, 2023 at 10:38 am

Sean Kenney’s Nature Connects Made with Lego Bricks exhibit was so popular in 2018, it’s making a return appearance from May 27 through September 4 at the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley in Winchester.

Adults and children alike will be mesmerized by the larger-than-life sculptures made entirely of Lego bricks, from the mama polar bear shielding her cubs to the hummingbird gingerly sipping nectar from a flower while poised in midair.

Nature Connects Made With Lego Bricks polar bear and cubs
Photo courtesy The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley

“The outdoor exhibit contains 14 sculptures this year, many placed where it makes sense in nature,” says Julie Armel, deputy director of marketing and communications. “For example, the monarch butterfly seems to have landed on a flowering bush.”

Nature Connects Made With Lego bricks butterfly
Photo courtesy The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley

A self-described “Lego maniac” from a young age, Kenney began sculpting with Legos in 2005. He started taking his exhibitions on tour in 2012, and his sculptures have since been enjoyed everywhere from the U.S. and Canada to Europe, Southeast Asia, and China.

Kenney’s designs start at his desk, as he manipulates Lego pieces and sketches each sculpture from photos, not through computer models. He confers with his team of artists in his Brooklyn, New York, art studio as they create each sculpture.

Several artists will collaborate on different parts of a sculpture to determine how they can place the square and rectangular bricks to sculpt the rounded body of, for example, a fox on the hunt. Kenney is determined to create accurate sculptures that demonstrate muscle in movement and the gravity-defying poses of animals poised in midair.

Lego sculpture of bird from Nature connects made with Lego bricks
Photo courtesy The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley

Kenney uses only regular Lego bricks just like those sold in stores, although he does buy them in bulk. He goes through as many as 400,000 Lego bricks every year. (And for the record: He has never been employed by or affiliated with Lego.) Once he finishes a sculpture, he glues the pieces together and fortifies them with metal braces so they will hold up as they are packed, shipped, unpacked, and displayed throughout the world.

Wherever the exhibit goes, viewers are challenged to think about how the interconnected structure of Lego bricks relates to our interconnected world and to explore themes like nature, ecology, and conservation.

Need to Know

WHAT
Sean Kenney’s Nature Connects Made with Lego Bricks exhibit

WHEN
May 27 to September 4

WHERE
Museum of the Shenandoah Valley: 901 Amherst St., Winchester

HOURS
Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

COST
$15 Adults, $10 Seniors, $10 ages 13–18, $5 ages 5–12, Free 4 and under and MSV members

Feature photo courtesy The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley

This story originally ran in our May issue. For more stories like this, subscribe to Northern Virginia Magazine.

Trending in NoVA

See What’s New and Opening Soon at Tysons Corner Center

Arlington Pizzeria Named One of the Top 50 in the U.S.

The 19 Best June Events in Northern Virginia and Washington, DC

Virginia Residents Are the Highest Income Earners in the Country

19 New Northern Virginia Restaurants Offering Fresh Flavors

things to do newsletter

Our Top Stories In Your Inbox

Our newsletters delivered weekly.

Subscribe

Feeds

RSS Feed Follow in Feedly

You May Also Like

FIFA World Cup soccer ball

Where to Watch the FIFA World Cup in Northern Virginia and DC

The World's Biggest Bounce House

The World’s Biggest Bounce House Is Coming to NoVA This Weekend

person looking at planet at smithsonian starstruck: immersive experience

Journey Into the Cosmos at the Smithsonian’s New Virtual Reality Experience

  • X

Company

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Writer’s Guidelines
  • Internships
  • Terms of Use

Magazine

  • Magazine
  • Subscription
  • Newsletter
  • Back Issues

Talk to Us

  • Contact Us
  • Submit an Event
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Shopping

  • Subscription
  • Back Issues
  • Plaques
  • Realtor Client Gift Subscriptions

On Newsstands Now

June 2026 best of nova cover

Copyright © 2026 Northern Virginia Magazine

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Hey AI.