An interactive at the base of a large sculpture reveals the creators and concepts behind it—and provides access to the great depth of content the sculpture contains.

The McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum is the nation’s first museum dedicated to the freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment.

Three timely examples of government censorship challenge visitors to consider if it is always a bad thing.

These four installations present hypothetical scenarios that visitors might encounter in their communities and challenges them to make decisions about the limits to freedom they will tolerate.

Four polling stations ask visitors where they would draw the line on freedom of expression in dozens of cases related to hate speech, indecency, violence, and wartime censorship.

Visitors create original collages with elements from notable works of art illustrating the range of expression artists have explored.

Visitors can magnify, transcribe, and come to understand the significance of the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and the Bill of Rights on three large touch screens.

In this interactive learning environment visitors can learn about issues of freedom throughout the world, access timely news feeds, take quizzes, and create their own Bill of Rights.

As an overture to the McCormick Freedom Museum, a 30-foot media wall orchestrates people throughout time exercising, challenging, celebrating, and defending freedom.

Five screens in an orchestrated flow depict the people, events, actions, and legislation of important social movements that relied on the First Amendment to secure their freedoms.

An original score and orchestrated motion graphics bring to life the earlier philosophies, events, and civilizations upon which American democracy was built.

This digital jukebox plays dozens of banned songs from the last six decades.

Dynamic data fuels this display devoted to the ongoing struggle for freedom today of persons around the world.

Visitors at the McCormick Freedom Museum hear our nation’s founders conveying their understanding of liberty in three vertically oriented plasma displays.

Visitors are invited to become a part of the exhibit by recording their thoughts on freedom for all to see and hear.

Two interactives encourage visitors to make their own judgments on several important Supreme Court cases related to the First Amendment.