From grey industry to playing children, Rudi Meisel's unique photos reveal how similar East and West Germany were. He was one of only a few photographers allowed to work on both sides during the Cold War.
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Juxtaposing East and West Germany in photos
In Rudi Meisel's historic photographs, East Germany and West Germany don't look all that different - even at the peak of the Cold War. Berlin's Amerika Haus is now showing Meisel's photos from the 70s and 80s.
Image: Rudi Meisel
Paradox of prosperity
A boy flies a kite in the middle of the A42 freeway in Germany's Ruhr Valley, just before it is finished and opened for traffic. In the background, Duisburg's steelworks spit smoke into the skies. Rudi Meisel's 1979 photograph depicts West Germany's age of prosperity.
Image: Rudi Meisel
A divided heart
Waiting, separation, love - this image contains the most pressing issues for the divided German soul in 1980, nine years before the Berlin Wall would come down. The people in the picture are waiting for a subway train at the Alexanderplatz station in East Berlin. As a photojournalist, Rudi Meisel traveled extensively through both Germanys and captured what he saw.
Image: Rudi Meisel
Communal building projects in the East
Pictured is a modern apartment complex in the East German city of Halle-Neustadt in 1983. The photographer's perspective casts the buildings in an ironic light: Veiled by the rain they seem much less imposing, while the muddy, unfinished street becomes the focal point of the image.
Image: Rudi Meisel
Everyone's playground
Is this picture from East or West Germany? In Rudi Meisel's photos, it's often hard to tell. He was one of only a few photographers to be allowed to work in both Germanys prior to 1989. This picture was taken in 1980 at the site of the former Anhalter Bahnhof railway station in the Kreuzberg district of West Berlin. Damaged during World War II, the station was closed in 1952.
Image: Rudi Meisel
Worlds collide
An elegantly dressed woman and a military tank: Two very different worlds come together in Rudi Meisel's photo, taken in 1980 in West Berlin on a national day dedicated to celebrating the military. During the Cold War, such weapons were put on show like trophies.
Image: Rudi Meisel
Dreary monotony
Grey streets, rain, East German monotony: Rudi Meisel took this photo on the corner of Schönhauser Allee and Dimitroffstrasse in East Berlin. In 1984, it was hard to imagine that Berlin's Prenzlauer Berg district would become the hippest part of the united city less than a decade later. The exhibition "Compatriots 1977-1987" runs through November 1 in the c/o Gallery in Berlin's Amerika Haus.
Image: Rudi Meisel
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Rudi Meisel was a professional border cross from 1977 to 1987. Reporting as a photojournalist for "Spiegel," "TIME," "Newsweek," and GEO," he documented everyday life in what was then East Germany and West Germany.
In the communist East, he was closely watched by the authorities, but he never let that bother his work. From a kissing couple to drab social building projects, Meisel's photos capture the essence of everyday life in both countries - which were bound together by a common culture, but divided by politics.
Ahead of the 25th anniversary of German reunification on October 3, 2015, the c/o Gallery in Berlin's Amerika Haus is presenting an exhibition of Rudi Meisel's works, entitled "Compatriot 1977-1987."
"Conservative comfort, inhospitable residential developments, neighborly chit-chat, boozy get-togethers in bars, youth rebellion, entertaining folk festivals, streets in disrepair - over a period of 11 years, the West German photographer Rudi Meisel captured the everyday life of the common people on both sides," wrote exhibition curator Felix Hofmann. "His photo-journalistic documents merge to create a unique, historical archive, causing the viewer to be confounded and amazed by the similarity of the subject."
The photographer himself explained that "it was only with distance that the similarities became clear" to him. He continued: "There was the same stuffiness in the West as there was in the East. Only that the stuffiness of the West had a few chrome strips and was spruced up."
Born in 1949 in Wilhelmshaven, Meisel grew up in Osnabrück and studied photography in Essen. Starting in 1971, he worked as a freelance news photographer, and later as an architcture photographer with Normal Foster. Rudi Meisel now lives and works in Berlin.
The exhibition at the c/o Gallery runs through November 1, 2015.