Rudolph Tegners Museum & Statuepark
Out across the open landscape between Dronningmølle and the sea, a low concrete building sits half-buried in the heath, and around it, scattered through grass and gorse, stand more than fifty bronze figures. This is Rudolph Tegner's Museum and Statue Park, one of North Zealand's most singular places, and a short, beautiful drive from Hornbæk.
Tegner was a Danish sculptor of vast ambition and divisive temperament, a man drawn equally to Michelangelo, to Greek myth, and to the dramatic gesture. Born in 1873, he spent a life travelling between Paris, Italy, Greece, North Africa, and the south of France, returning home each time to a country that often misunderstood him. He designed this museum himself in the 1930s, a brutalist temple in raw concrete, and chose this stretch of windswept moor as the resting place for his life's work.
The statue park unfolds without walls or fences. You walk among the figures as they emerge from the heather, some heroic, some grieving, all caught mid-gesture in green patina. Light shifts, weather moves through, and the sculptures change with the hour. Inside the museum, Tegner himself lies buried beneath the central hall, surrounded by the work he made and the world he built around it.A visit pairs well with lunch at Søren's Café, with a slow walk afterwards down to the coast, and with the quiet feeling, particular to this part of the country, of having found something both grand and entirely your own.
Approximately 15 minutes by car from CORI Hornbæk.
price: 80,- DKK
season : Year-round