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Kay Bojesen, Danish Design
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Skiers

  Kay Bojesen, 1940

les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940

The 2 fresh-faced Skiers were designed towards the end of the 1940s. The happy girl skier with the red hat and the checked jacket is named Datti, which was the pet-name of Kay Bojesen's daughter-in-law.
The boy is named Boje after the pet-name of Kay's son.

les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940

Material painted beech

Boje 17 x 6,5 x H16 cm Datti 17 x 6 x H15,5 cm

les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940

Boje - the boy

les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940

Datti - the girl

les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940
les Skieurs   Kay Bojesen, 1940

Kay Bojesen

Kay Bojesen is famous for his wooden figures but it is widely unknown that Kay Bojesen was in fact a silversmith. He started his career as a silversmith with Georg Jensen and has designed both jewellery, cutlery and silverware. Interest in wood was sparked after the birth of his son Otto. This inspired his fascination with children's play and most importantly wooden toys.
Kay Bojesen began experimenting with wooden materials and soon he had created a series of wooden animals that would inspire children through play. For Kay Bojesen, it was important that the animals were not very realistic in order to trigger children's imagination. For this reason, his motto was "the lines should laugh".
Kay Bojesen is considered one of Denmark's foremost designers and when he died at the age of 72, he left a big legacy behind. A legacy of design icons like the classic wood pan, zebra, puffin and the pair of doves ‘Lovebirds’.