Goudstikker and Augspurg arrived in Munich and founded the
Hofatelier Elvira in 1887. Goudstikker was the first German woman, who was not married, to obtain a royal license for photography. The studio became a meeting place for the
avant-garde and was frequented by many noted figures.
Isadora Duncan,
Marie-Adélaïde, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg,
Rainer Maria Rilke, and other artists, intellectuals and royalty had their photographs taken there. In 1898 the partnership dissolved and Goudstikker ran the studio alone until 1908. She hired the architect,
August Endell to design the studio, at #15 Von-der-Tann-Straße, which became quite noted. The turquoise and violet
Art Nouveau façade with a stylized dragon in
bas-relief was a recognizable landmark. Goudstikker's younger sister Mathilde Nora, often called Nora, joined her to work as a photographer. Near the end of her life, Goudstikker leased the business to the photographer Emma Uibleisen, but
World War I and its aftermath had dispersed the traditional clientele. As their photography business grew, the two women became staunch feminists. Goudstikker and Augspurg were interested in redefining women's spaces. Goudstikker wore short hair and simple, relaxed clothing and projected what seemed to contemporaries to be a female masculinity. She was the inspiration of characters such as "Hans" in
Lou Andreas-Salomé′s
Mädchenreign, "she" in
Frieda von Bülow′s
She and He and "Box" in
Ernst von Wolzogen′s novel
The Third Sex. Diary entries of Salomé and Bülow confirm that Goudstikker was the muse for all three characters and they gave Goudstikker the nickname "Puck". In 1889, Goudstikker and Augspurg joined the movement to open university study to women, German Women for Reform, and then the following year, joined the Modern Life Society to advance modernity into social and artistic realms for women. The meetings of both organizations were kept under surveillance by police, who believed that they fostered immorality and breached the ban on women's political involvement. Augspurg was often the speaker, while Goudstikker's job was to convince the authorities that the meetings were not for the purpose of political agitation. In May, 1894, Goudstikker and Augspurg founded the Society for Women's Interests (), to broaden the reach of women's organizations to include the socio-economic sphere.
Ika Freudenberg was one of the founders of this organization, and though a more moderate feminist, served as its manager from 1896 until her death. When Augspurg and Goudstikker's partnership dissolved, Goudstikker moved toward practical issues of feminism focusing on economic and legal parity. She led the legal protection office of the VFF from its founding in 1898 until her death and was the first German woman permitted to represent youth court cases. In the youth courts, a legal degree or license was not required and while self-taught, Goudstikker's prowess at legal defense earned respect in Munich. When the new studio building was completed, Goudstikker and Freudenberg lived together in the building behind the studio at #3a Königinstraße. In 1898 Goudstikker converted from Judaism to Protestantism. Goudstikker died in Munich on 20 March 1924. == Legacy ==