Ursula Arnold (born Ursula Musche 10 March 1929 – died 24 May 2012) was a German photographer.[1][2] Much of her best known work involves street scenes in Berlin and Leipzig produced during the German Democratic Republic years. Living under a one-party government which valued visual artistry as a device for influence and control over the people, she was described as "one of those artists who could not easily be integrated".[3] She said (in 1990): "If I ask myself if there's a different reality for me [as a woman rather than as a man], then the answer is [one to a different question]: not to belong to the rulers. My sympathies belong to those who are not part of the ruling establishment".[a][4]
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