Marguerite Agniel
![In [[Halasana]], Plough Pose.<br />Photograph by [[John de Mirjian]], c. 1928](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/87/Marguerite_Agniel_posing_with_her_back_arched_and_legs_stret_Wellcome_V0048584.jpg)
After appearing in ''Vogue'' in 1926, she wrote for ''Physical Culture'' and other magazines. In the 1930s, she published a series of books, including ''Body Sculpture'' and ''Your Figure'', advocating health and beauty practices, illustrated mainly with photographs of herself.
Agniel stated that her dance technique derived from Ruth St. Denis (who had followed François Delsarte), while her "aesthetic athletics" came mainly from the physical culture advocate, Bernarr Macfadden. She described the sexologist Havelock Ellis and the musicologist Sigmund Spaeth as major influences. Provided by Wikipedia