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Le Corbusier: "20 heures, arrivée à Chandigarh" (1951-1959). Hammer price: DKK 1.75 million / € 234,000 (including buyer's premium)
Le Corbusier: "20 heures, arrivée à Chandigarh" (1951-1959). Hammer price: DKK 1.75 million / € 234,000 (including buyer's premium)

Press release -

Utzon's Favourite Work by Le Corbusier Sets New World Record

Tuesday evening the enamel "20 heures, arrivée à Chandigarh" by Swiss-French architect and artist Le Corbusier achieved an impressive hammer price of DKK 1.75 million (€ 234,000 including buyer’s premium), which is a doubling of the previous world record for an enamel by Le Corbusier set in Zurich in July 2016. The work comes from the private collection of the world-famous Danish architect Jørn Utzon and was his favourite piece by the artist. It was made while Utzon and Corbusier collaborated on the interior of the Sydney Opera House during the 1950s.

It is the second time we offer such an important piece of art from Jørn Utzon’s private collection. In June 2015 we also broke a world record for a work by Le Corbusier, when we auctioned off the monumental tapestry ”Les dés sont jetés”, which was purchased by the Sydney Opera House. The record-breaking enamel at this auction was made for Jørn Utzon personally, as an example for the Sydney project. It has never been exhibited in public, nor offered for sale before and has been in the ownership of the Utzon family until today,” says Frederik Bruun Rasmussen, Director of international sales at Bruun Rasmussen Auctioneers.

The collaboration between Utzon and Le Corbusier is well documented in a number of letters between the two – dated between 1958-60. In a letter from 31 March 1960 Jørn Utzon writes to Le Corbusier: “Every day your paintings are a great inspiration to me here on our walls – I am looking very much forward to the Tapisserie”. On the back of the enamel there is a reference to a sketch by Le Corbusier, which describes how this type of artwork could be hung in the Sydney Opera House.


The work comes from Utzon’s private home in Hellebæk about 50 kilometres north of Copenhagen.

Utzon, Le Corbusier and the Opera House

Jørn Utzon (1918-2008) graduated as an architect in 1942. His career gathered momentum when he in 1957 won the international architectural competition for the Sydney Opera House. The next several years he worked on the most famous building of the 20th century, and everything went according to plan until a change in government in Australia in 1965, which forced Utzon to leave the construction process of the building.

The opera house's exterior was finished, and Jørn Utzon was about to begin work on the interior. He had plans to decorate the interior of the opera with tapestries and enamels by Le Corbusier. But the new governing party in the Australian parliament wanted the building finished quickly and inexpensively. Therefore, they suspended the payments to Jørn Utzon, who withdrew from the construction in 1966. Australian architects completed the construction, and the Sydney Opera House was finished in 1973 without Utzon's ideas regarding the interior design and Le Corbusier’s decorations. 


The son of Jørn Utzon, Jan Utzon, was present at the sale of the enamel Tuesday evening, where it was sold for a record hammer price of DKK 1.75 million / € 234,000 (including buyer’s premium).

The seller of the enamel, Jan Utzon, stated after the auction: “The result exceeded my wildest expectations, and I’m very happy that I chose Bruun Rasmussen Auctioneers for the sale of this family treasure. I considered contacting the auction houses of Christie’s and Sotheby’s among others, but as you had so successfully taken care of my earlier sales, I found it natural to let you handle this, for my family so important piece of art.”

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Bruun Rasmussen Auctioneers is one of Scandinavia’s leading international auction houses, and one of Denmark’s oldest. It all started on 6 October 1948, when Arne Bruun Rasmussen conducted the first traditional auction in the saleroom at Bredgade 33 in Copenhagen. Today, Jesper Bruun Rasmussen stands at the helm of the family-run business together with the third generation of the family, his son Frederik and daughter Alexa, and the company’s CEO Jakob Dupont.

In 2004, the first online auction was launched, and today the auction house has expanded to include departments in Copenhagen and Aarhus and representations in Sweden, Germany, France, Belgium, Luxemburg, Spain, Italy, Thailand and the US. About 100,000 lots are auctioned off each year at the traditional auctions and daily online auctions. Here you can bid on everything from art, antiques, modern design and jewellery to books, coins, stamps, wine and weaponry.

Contacts

Kirstine Dam Olsen

Kirstine Dam Olsen

Press contact +45 8818 1064

Bruun Rasmussen – Part of the Bonhams Network

"Going once, going twice. Sold to the lady in the front row". For more than 75 years, the auction house Bruun Rasmussen has sold art, antiques, design, jewellery, wristwatches and collector’s items such as wine, books, coins and stamps. After having been family-owned through three generations, we were bought in 2022 by the English auction house Bonhams, which was founded in England in 1793 and is today one of the world's leading auction houses. We are now part of an international network with a global reach, and we present and sell art where it makes the most sense in relation to potential buyers. This also means that through the network we offer more than 60 categories of items at our auctions.

Art and credibility are at the heart of everything we do. The work in the auction house places great demands on our knowledge of art and trends on the market. Our specialists are the most experienced and competent in the industry, and in the Bonhams Network we share knowledge and communicate across national borders with a large number of international specialists. This way, we can provide the best valuation and advice that have become our trademark – and thereby offer the best lots from all categories and achieve the highest hammer prices for the benefit of our customers.

Tradition and innovation go hand in hand. At Bruun Rasmussen, we are one of Europe's most modern and digital auction houses, and it is only natural for us to adapt to changes in the market. Innovation is part of our DNA, while we are also deeply rooted in our history. The foundation of the company rests on our two types of auctions – Online Auction and Live Auction. Every week we put more than a thousand lots up for auction at bruun-rasmussen.dk, and several times a year we present exclusive lots live in our saleroom. We are proud to sell art and design in virtually every category and price range to and for people all over the world who are driven by the same passion as we are.

We want to be a living centre of culture, and since the autumn of 2023, we have been located in Lyngby north of Copenhagen in a new, modern domicile. Here you can not only explore among all the art objects on display and bid on the exciting auctions, you can also meet our specialists, get an estimate on your own items, consign them for auction, listen to exciting lectures and participate in cultural events. We also have branches in Aarhus and Glostrup and regularly go on valuation trips around Denmark and abroad. Our goal is to always be available and for everyone to have a good experience in our auction house.

Welcome to Bruun Rasmussen – we can help you make a good purchase or achieve a great sale!

Bruun Rasmussen – Part of the Bonhams Network
Nørgaardsvej 3
2800 Kongens Lyngby
Denmark
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