
The understimated aesthetics of Bundesliga From top to bottom of the ranking there are great graphic traditions
With Bayern Munich's dominance thanks to the Champions League win in Lisbon and two out of four teams both in the Europa League and Champions League semi-finals, the Bundesliga has greatly catched the eyes. But in reality, as some recent presentations also demonstrate, the aesthetic side of the German championship also has great potential. Unfortunately underestimated.
In fact, the latest publications in Stuttgart and Mainz 05 - combined with adidas' inclusion of Bayern in the Human Race project in October - have highlighted a underlying aesthetic of the German league, in which, in addition to top clubs Bayern and Borussia Dortmund - plus a new entry in Nike's Elite clubs, Leipzig - there are many other interesting clubs for the production of jerseys. In Germany, home of adidas and PUMA, over the years first-level aesthetic systems have been canonized, not affected by history, capable of creating a continuous thread between the reality of the Eighties or Nineties and the contemporaneity. In fact, many uniforms that this year (or in recent seasons) have been seen in the Bundesliga, keep the templates and certain old graphic schemes, a symptom of the continuation of a style that has not stopped.
Finally, another thing that should be rewarded in the aesthetics of the German championship is the structures and communication. If stadiums are a source of inspiration for all clubs in Europe and deserve a separate chapter, the communication of the Bundesliga website is also to be appreciated - we had explained how functional and graphically beautiful the site and logo of the German league were, especially in comparison to that of the Serie A. A contemporary symptom of how fascinating and precious the entire Bundesliga aesthetic universe is, capable of going beyond the apparent enormity of Bayern Munich and Lewandowski. There's so much more.