The Viceregal Lion
  1. The Governor General of Canada
Heraldry Today

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Bata Shoe Museum Foundation

Toronto, Ontario
Grant of Arms, Flag and Badge
May 6, 1995
Vol. III, p. 10

Click on each image to enlarge. The blazon and symbolism for each element will accompany the enlarged image.


Blazon

Arms

Per chevron Or and Azure in chief two keys wards upwards to the dexter Azure and in base a boot Or;

Crest

A full skin Or edged and charged with a round knife blade upwards Azure;

Motto

ONE STEP AT A TIME (or PER SAECULA GRADATIM);

Flag

Azure on a Canadian pale Or an escutcheon of the Arms of the Foundation edged Azure;

Badge

On a hurt edged Or a boot between to the dexter a cobbler's hammer head upwards and to the sinister an awl handle upwards all Or;


Symbolism

Arms

Blue and gold are the official colours of the Museum. The triangular division of the shield echoes the position of the thongs found on the most common form of sandal as they would be viewed by the wearer. The boot represents all footwear. The two keys refer to the symbol in Canadian heraldry for museums, and they denote the two central components of the Bata Shoe Museum’s mission, to study and publicize the history of footwear and shoemaking.

Crest

The skin and knife symbolize the materials and tools that have been used for centuries in the shoemaking process.

Motto

This phrase is a suggestion made by Robertson Davies. It offers a triple meaning. First, it alludes to the progression of events and initiatives accompanying the development of the collections and the Museum. Second, it describes the locomotive experience of walking. Third, it symbolizes the step-by-step process by which visitors to the Museum will augment their knowledge and understanding of the history of shoes as cultural signifiers of social custom, economic change and climatic shifts.

Flag

The Canadian location of the Museum is dramatized through the use of the national flag structure shown in the institution’s official colours of blue and gold. In place of the maple leaf is the Museum’s shield of arms.

Badge

The badge is an adaptation of the Bata Shoe Museum Foundation emblem which was based on a European seal dating back to the Middle Ages. The blue roundel represents the planet Earth, where our feet make the most fundamental contact and leave a profound impression.


Background

Canada Gazette Information

The announcement of the Letters Patent was made on October 14, 1995, in Volume 129, page 3592 of the Canada Gazette.


Artist Information

Creator(s)
Original concept of Robert D. Watt, Chief Herald of Canada, assisted by the Heralds of the Canadian Heraldic Authority

Painter
Linda Nicholson

Calligrapher
Judith Bainbridge


Recipient Information

Civil Institution
Cultural Organization