Between 1977 and 1990 Gundula Schulze Eldowy roamed East Berlin with her camera: her powerful
direct images capture the long post-war period in the socialist part of the city the deep
scars of the inferno that had engulfed Germany and the old Berlin milieu with its
one-of-a-kind individuals and people living on the fringes who soon vanished from the face of
the city after the fall of the wall. Schulze Eldowy trains her gaze on the existential aspects
of life. She looks at the world with a rare combination of sensitivity and a lack of inhibition
that is both touching and painful. The series of images that are being shown in Berlin on a
Dog's Night constitute Schulze Eldowy's early work. These are the pictures that brought her
international recognition and now feature in important photographic collections. The book
which has long been out of print is now being reprinted in a new layout with over thirty
additional photographs. Gundula Schulze Eldowy b. 1954 in Erfurt studied at the Academy of
Fine Arts Leipzig (HGB) and began working as a freelance photographer in Berlin in 1984. In the
period up until 1990 she produced the black-and-white works Berlin in einer Hundenacht Arbeit
Aktporträts Tamerlan and the two colour cycles Der große und der kleine Schritt and Den
letzten beißen die Hunde. In 1990 she embarked on a series of journeys that took her to Egypt
(1993-2000) Japan (1996 -97) and from 2001 on to Peru Bolivia and Ecuador. She lives in
Berlin and Peru.