An Old Volvo Truck Could Fetch $2 Million at a Bonhams Car Auction—Thanks to a Banksy Mural

Despite his prankish beginnings, Banksy has earned himself a
place of renown in the mainstream art world. His coveted murals are
sold by lucky landlords and then turn up at high-end art fairs and
exhibitions around the world. Now, Banksy seems poised to conquer
the luxury car market too—sort of.

A work that the artist painted onto a Volvo FL6 box truck
back in 2000 is headed to Bonhams for the auction house’s Goodwood Revival car sale in Chichester,
England, on September 14. There, it will hit the block
alongside high-octane Aston Martins, Bugattis, and Porsches.
The used truck would typically sell for just a few thousand
dollars, but covered in Banksy’s graffiti it is expected to
fetch between £1 million and £1.5 million ($1.3 million–$2
million).

“Banksy is arguably the most important artist to have emerged
since the millennium and this, his largest commercial work,
represents a new high watermark of quality for works of his to
appear at auction,” said Ralph Taylor, Bonhams head of postwar and
contemporary art, in a statement. “The composition bears all the
hallmarks of this peerless agent provocateur.”

The owner of the Turbozone International Circus Company,
known for its pyrotechnic productions, asked Banksy to use the
truck as a canvas for an outdoor party in Spain to celebrate the
start of the new millennium. Banksy worked on the painting,
titled Turbo Zone Truck (Laugh Now But One Day We’ll Be in
Charge),
that night and the next two weeks, and the truck
subsequently went on tour with Turbozone, traveling throughout
Europe and to South America.

Banksy, <em>SWAT Van</em> 2006) sold for £218,500 ($267,226) at Bonhams London in 2016. Photo courtesy of Bonhams.

Banksy, SWAT Van (2006)
sold for £218,500 ($267,226) at Bonhams London in 2016. Photo
courtesy of Bonhams.

This isn’t the first time Bonhams has sold a Banksy-adorned
vehicle. In the auction house’s June 2016 “Post-War & Contemporary Art” sale, a Swat van painted by
the artist fetched £218,500 ($267,226) on an
estimate of £200,000–£300,000 ($290,000–$430,000). Banksy made
the piece for his breakout 2006 “Barely Legal” show in Los
Angeles.

Banksy’s auction record currently stands at £1 milllion ($1.4
million)
 for his Girl With Balloon,
which he rigged to self-shred after the hammer dropped for it at
Sotheby’s London last year. Could the luxury car sale be Banksy’s
next target? Here’s hoping the auction house security team does a
thorough sweep.

See more photos of the work below.

Banksy, <em>Turbo Zone Truck (Laugh Now But One Day We’ll Be in Charge)</em>, 2000 (detail). Photo courtesy of Bonhams.

Banksy, detail of Turbo Zone
Truck (Laugh Now But One Day We’ll Be in Charge)
 (2000).
Photo courtesy of Bonhams.

Banksy, <em>Turbo Zone Truck (Laugh Now But One Day We’ll Be in Charge)</em>, 2000. The work carries a pre-sale estimate of £1 million–1 million ($1.3 million–2 million) for its upcoming sale at Bonhams' Goodwood Revival car auction. Photo courtesy of Bonhams.

Banksy, Turbo Zone Truck (Laugh Now
But One Day We’ll Be in Charge)
 (2000). Courtesy of
Bonhams.

Banksy, <em>Turbo Zone Truck (Laugh Now But One Day We’ll Be in Charge)</em>, 2000 (detail). Photo courtesy of Bonhams.

Banksy, detail of Turbo Zone
Truck (Laugh Now But One Day We’ll Be in Charge)
 (2000).
Courtesy of Bonhams.

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