Kay Bojesen | Songbird Love
The Kay Bojesen Songbird Love spreads its wings with a message of hope and care, adding a new loving chapter to the story of Kay Bojesen’s original stories made of wood. With its bright glow and peaceful charisma, Songbird Love is a guiding light in the modern world.
The cream-coloured plumage and pale pink beak and legs have been carefully selected, giving Love a balanced, harmonious look. The inside of the eye has a warm sand colour that gives Love a calm and loving look.
Specifications
- Made from solid beech wood
- Colour: rose, white
- H 15.5cm x W 8cm x D 16cm
- Kay Bojesen Denmark donates DKK 50 per sold Love Songbird to a specially selected beneficiary who helps to create hope for the future
- Designed in Denmark
Designer
Silversmith and designer Kay Bojesen had a very special talent. He was able to bring wood to life, and he became world-famous for creating wooden toys that had soul and an impish sense of humour. With more than 2000 pieces to his name, Kay Bojesen was one of Denmark's most prolific artisans in the 20th century. He is best known for his playful and cheerful monkeys, royal life guards and other wooden toys, but his wide-ranging production also includes jewellery, cutlery, teapots and silver goblets.
Kay Bojesen graduated as a silversmith in 1910 after completing his apprenticeship with silversmith Georg Jensen. As one of the first Danish artisans to do so, he embraced functionalism. He was among the pioneers who organised Den Permanente association – a cooperative of artists that included a shop and exhibition space which over the decades came to represent the best in Danish and Scandinavian design.1919 became the start of a new era for Kay Bojesen. He got married and his son Otto was born. This sparked Kay Bojesen's imagination and fascination for children, toys and wood and brought back memories of his own childhood when his father (the publisher Ernst Bojesen – the publisher of the Danish satirical annual Blæksprutten (The Octopus)) cut wooden figures for him and encouraged his children to be creative, imaginative and playful.