How sneakers turned into a crucial fashion statement
Annabelle Steffes / Ruben Kalus / egMay 17, 2016
They are more than just a training shoe: The Hamburg exhibition "Sneakers: Design for Fast Feet" explores how the comfortable sports footwear became a fashion statement and even found its way into German politics.
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How sneakers conquered urban culture
They are more than just a training shoe: The Hamburg exhibition "Sneakers: Design for Fast Feet" explores how the comfortable sports footwear became a fashion statement and even found its way into German politics.
Image: MKG Hamburg/Michaela Hille
Turning running shoes into design
Over the decades, sneakers have evolved into way more than just sports footwear. They became associated with hip-hop culture in the mid 80s and are now a central fashion accessory. The exhibition "Sneakers: Design for Fast Feet," held at the Hamburg Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe (Museum of Arts and Crafts), explores the phenomenon of sneaker culture through a variety of perspectives.
Image: Andrew Zuckerman & Puma
The beginnings
This Olympic running shoe from 1936 does not have much in common with today's sneakers - but did contribute to the success of two current world-renowned brands. With their business founded in the 1920s, the brothers Dassler in Herzogenaurach were selling 200,000 pairs of shoes every year until World War II. After the war, the family business was split in two companies: Adidas and Puma.
Image: MKG Hamburg
The most successful shoe ever
Sold over 600 million times, Converse's "Chuck Taylor All Stars," aka "Chucks," is the most successful shoe ever. The initial All Star model, composed of a rubber sole and a canvas upper, was designed in 1917 in Massachusetts. Basketball player Chuck Taylor improved the shoe, and his signature was added to the model released in 1923.
Image: Yoichi Komatsu
Light and airy: Air Max and Air Jordan
Nike developed two smash hits with its models Air Jordan and Air Max (picture). The first Air Jordan came out in 1984, in collaboration with the most successful basketball player of all times, Michael Jordan. The shoe quickly turned into a collector's item. The Air Max that followed in 1987 also became cult - it was especially popular in the hip-hop scene.
Image: MKG Hamburg/Nike
From training shoes to sneakers
The use of the term "sneaker" for trainers is often attributed to the US advertising agent Henry Nelson McKinney. At the beginning of the 20th century, he promoted how quiet shoes with rubber soles were in comparison to leather-sole dress shoes: You could easily sneak up on someone while wearing sneakers.
Image: MKG Hamburg
The tennis shoe minister
Green party politician Joschka Fischer became Environment Minister in Hessen in 1985 and caused a stir by appearing at his oath of office ceremony wearing these white Nikes - an act considered pure provocation at the time. The German politician was afterwards nicknamed "the tennis shoe minister."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
In Boris Becker's footsteps
In a way, 1985 marked a turning point in the pop cultural history of the sneaker. That year, the band Run DMC recorded their single "My Adidas" and the German tennis wunderkind Boris Becker won Wimbledon in this battered pair of Pumas.
Image: MKG Hamburg
Creative sneaker ads
Sneakers have also become central urban fashion accessories thanks to funny and unusual commercials. After all, you never know when you'll suddenly need to take off in a hurry…
Image: TDA® Boulder
Unlimited creativity
About a dozen major brands and hundreds of smaller ones compete for consumers' attention worldwide. Comfort is no longer the most important sales' argument: Image and design are crucial. Shoe brands are promoted through star athletes and are released in limited editions with huge marketing campaigns.
Image: Kai von Rabenau
Trendy neon
The German national football team is another trendsetter with its bold-colored shoes. Neon orange sneakers might not yet be the norm, but they will definitely help your colleagues wake up if you wear them at the office. The exhibition "Sneakers: Design for fast feet" runs in Hamburg until August 21, 2016.
Image: MKG Hamburg/Michaela Hille
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For more than 30 years, sport shoes have been a trend. Whether white or boldly colored, some even choose to wear them in formal settings.
German politician Joschka Fischer memorably contributed to paving the way by wearing sneakers to his official oath ceremony when he became Environment Minister in the German state of Hessen in 1985. It was considered a breach of the offical dress code in the regional parliament.
The exhibition "Sneakers: Design for Fast Feet," held at the Hamburg Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe until August 28, 2016 is the first major show in Germany to examine the phenomenon from different angles, exploring its role in youth culture, its design and marketing strategies and the collectors' scene.