The book "The Dogs of Venice" offers an original perspective of the romantic Italian city through photos of its real inhabitants with their four-legged friends.
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The dogs of Venice
The photography book "The Dogs of Venice" explores the romantic Italian city through an unusual perspective: its elegant and extravagant dogs. Here are 10 of them.
Image: Luiza Puiu
The other Venice
Canale Grande, Rialto, Piazza San Marco: The Venice countless tourists trample through every day feels more like a tourist trap than a real city. Yet there's also another version of Venice, with real residents who buy their fish and vegetables at the market and drink an espresso every day in their favorite bar - and many of them own a dog.
Image: Luiza Puiu
A business journalist decides to have fun
Christian Ortner, the author of the book "The Dogs of Venice," is not really a dog fan. The Austrian journalist lives in Vienna and usually writes about the economy. "A rather dry business," he told DW. As he usually spends a week in Venice every year in the winter, he noticed a typical Venetian phenomenon while he was there.
Image: Luiza Puiu
An amusing peculiarity
"I was taking a walk, and I realized that there are many more dogs in Venice than anywhere else, and that they are quite extraordinary ones - and above all, that Venetians like to dress them up when it gets cold," Ortner said. He found it "so curious and funny" that he decided to make a book about it.
Image: Luiza Puiu
Hundreds of photos
To realize this project, he asked the photographer Luiza Puiu to find 80 funny dogs. She spent two weeks in Venice last January and came back with 12,000 photos - of about 120 dogs. She sifted through them all to select the best pups.
Image: Luiza Puiu
Churchill's reincarnation
Despite the enormous number of photos, the author immediately identified this albino boxer as his favorite in the lot. Although he is actually called Achille, Ortner finds it rather looks like Winston Churchill. "When everyone is looking away, this dog certainly smokes a fat Havana cigar," Ortner writes, "and pours himself a Scotch."
Image: Luiza Puiu
Spontaneous encounter
The photographer Luiza Puiu, who was born in Romania and lives in Vienna, was especially happy when she took this picture because "it just happened so spontaneously." This typical Venetian dolceria, which is a kind of pastry shop, turns into a timeless ballroom for this over-sized dog.
Image: Luiza Puiu
Venetian flair
"Dog owners are very sociable," says Puiu. That helped her while she was looking for more unusual canines. Take, for example, this dog, which apparently likes to stand on his master's shoulders. It had already caught the attention of the author during a previous stay. Puiu managed to track it down, as people recognized the man and his pet as regular customers of the wine bar Enoteca Rio Martin.
Image: Luiza Puiu
The spiritual leader of the Venetian dog cult
The legendary art collector Peggy Guggenheim (1898-1979) lived in Venice for 30 years until her death and owned many dogs. Her four-legged companions were buried in the courtyard of her house - right next to her. The residence now houses the famous Peggy Guggenheim Collection, with works by Picasso, Kandinsky, Mondrian and more. However, dogs, even this cute tiny one, are no longer allowed there.
Image: Luiza Puiu
Venetian dogs do not get lost
Although Venice is known to be a labyrinth that disorients all tourists, the gondolier Nicola Grossi is convinced that this would never happen to a local canine. His 14-year-old dog Sandro can as comfortably travel all day on a gondola as he can find his way home alone through the city's narrow alleys.
Image: Luiza Puiu
Elegance in everyday life
"They are like the Venetians themselves, very extravagant and elegant," says Puiu of the dogs she photographed. The book "The Dogs of Venice" by Christian Ortner and Luiza Puiu provides glimpses of the everyday life of the inhabitants of a postcard city overrun with tourists - that nevertheless manages to remain romantic.
Image: Luiza Puiu
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Anyone who owns a dog automatically experiences life in the city differently. These animals need to be walked every day, no matter whether it's raining or freezing.
Venetians have found a solution to make sure their pets do not freeze outside during the humid winter months: They dress them up. The elegant suits of these dogs reveal a lot about the fashion sense and the extravagance of their owners.
Adorable and charming, the four-legged fashion icons featured in the book "Die Hunde von Venedig" (The Dogs of Venice) reveal details of everyday life in the City of Bridges. The dogs were found enjoying a break in the various cafes, shops and markets of the city. Many popular tourist highlights can also be recognized in the pictures along the way.
The authors themselves have little to do with dogs. The journalist Christian Ortner finds that it would be inconvenient to have one in his city apartment in Vienna and the photographer Luiza Puiu says she is even afraid of them - although meeting hundreds of dogs for this project apparently rid her of her phobia.
"Die Hunde von Venedig" by Christian Ortner and Luiza Puiu, published by Edition a, hit bookstores in Germany on October 22.