From Queen Mary to Jimmy Choo…Fashion Museum traces the evolution of shoe style.
The Fashion Museum Bath is to showcase some of the highlights and curiosities of its world-class shoe collection in a stunning new display, Shoephoria!, which opens later this year.
Demonstrating the creativity of shoemakers throughout history, more than 100 pairs of shoes and boots will be displayed, over half of which have never been on show before.
From the oldest shoes in the collection to shoes belonging to Her Majesty Queen Mary, from trainers and sneakers to designer shoes by Vivienne Westwood, Versace and Jimmy Choo, the shoes on display will document the evolution of shoe style over the last 300 years.
Shoes will be interspersed with the fashions on display as part of the A History of Fashion in 100 Objects exhibition, celebrating fashion from the 1600s to the present day.
Star objects in the display include:·
The oldest shoe in the Museum’s collection: a red velvet mule with gold and silver embroidery covered with raised work metal thread embroidery in real gold thread ca 1690s.
Wooden pattens with iron ring ca 1720s – these were worn outside to save your shoes from the roads. In Jane Austen’s novel Persuasion, the clatter of iron pattens on the streets of Bath gave Anne Elliot a headache.
Queen Victoria’s boots ca 1850s made by Joseph Box, London.
Queen Mary’s diamante bow shoes ca 1930s – among the earliest shoes in the collection by celebrated British shoemaker Rayne.
Trainers and sneakers, from Converse to Nike Air Jordan.
A pair of long green Russian boots ca 1900s worn by Lady Ottoline Morrell (1873 -1938), a six foot tall, flame-haired English aristocrat on the fringes of the Bloomsbury Group. Often remarked for her flamboyant and extraordinary sense of dress, Ottoline was well known in her day for her intense friendships with artist Augustus John and philosopher Bertrand Russell amongst others. All her clothes are in the care of the Fashion Museum collection.
Boots - from Dr. Martens to Kickers, including a pair of Dr. Martens boots (about 2015) digitally printed with an image taken from famous series of Georgian paintings ‘The Rake’s Progress‘ by Hogarth.
A special feature will be the Wearers’ Wall, at the heart of the Museum galleries, giving visitors a glimpse of the lives of the original owners and wearers of the shoes that are now preserved for posterity in the Fashion Museum collection in Bath. From Joan Mee, who ran away from home in the 1940s to join the WRENS and spent the years of the Second World War serving in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), to socialite Rani Molly of Pudukkottai who chose shoes in a rainbow range of pastel-hued silk satin from the finest shops in the Rue Royale in Paris in the 1920s and 1930s, these very personal choices, many still bearing the imprint of the wearer’s foot, will showcase the sartorial choices of named men and women of the past.
Entry to the Fashion Museum is £9.50. Concessions available.