Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Weimar Republic - Part 2

Today we move into two other art movements evolving in connection with the Weimar Republic; Bauhaus (1919–1933), which stripped things down to geometry, light, function, and form, and German Expressionism (1905–1920), which pushed in the opposite direction toward emotion, sexuality, distortion, psychology, and raw inner experience.


1. Hipnosis - Sascha Schneider (more below)


It helps to remember that no art scene appears out of thin air. German philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) laid the foundation for this atmosphere with ideas about breaking old systems and reinventing the self through art, the body, and personal freedom.

The full picture also includes Austrian painters, modern dance, and the broader artistic energy shaping the visual language of mid-century physique photography in the U.S. And all of this unfolded alongside America’s own Roaring Twenties right before the Great Depression and Dust Bowl changed the emotional weather on both sides of the Atlantic.



2. Duschende Junge Männer, Phoenix Gummiwerke, Hamburg (Young Men Showering, Phoenix Rubberworks) - 1954 - Herbert List



Two Austrian painters influenced the aesthetic shift here: Gustav Klimt (1862–1918) and his younger protégé Egon Schiele(1890–1918), whose raw sexuality, distorted figures, and psychological intensity pushed Expressionism into more openly erotic territory. Schiele in particular — widely understood today as bisexual — still feels startlingly modern with those angular limbs, exposed bodies, and nervous sexual energy floating against pale empty space.


3. Male Nude With Staff - Gustav Klimt



4. Eros - Egon Schiele


That influence spilled directly into German modernism through artists like Sascha Schneider (1870–1927), Paul Klee, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Max Beckmann, and Max Ernst. Schneider especially catches my attention here as an openly homoerotic figure whose massive mythological male bodies feel like a direct bridge between Symbolism, German body culture, and later physique photography.



5. Growing Strength - Sascha Schneider



6. Sascha Schneider - 1904


7. Junge Maenner am Meer (Young Men by the Sea) - Max Beckmann


Modern dance was part of this same cultural explosion too, especially through Austrian choreographer Rudolf von Laban(1879–1958), one of the founding figures of German Expressionist dance. Along with helping shape Ausdruckstanz, Laban also created Labanotation, still the primary written system for documenting movement today — basically sheet music for dance. Like Klimt and Schiele, he came out of that same Austrian modernist atmosphere feeding directly into Weimar culture.


8. Rudolph von Laban


Laban’s influence carried into artists like Kurt Jooss (1901–1979), whose antiwar dance The Green Table critiqued the growing Nazi machine at enormous personal risk, and Harald Kreutzberg (1902–1968), the openly gay Ausdruckstanz star whose dramatic photographs, theatrical masculinity, and sculptural body feel deeply tied to the same body-conscious aesthetic running through Weimar photography and art.



9. Harald Kreutzberg - Edward Weston


By the mid-century, you can really start to see these threads landing directly in photography through figures like George Hoyningen-Huene (1900–1968), Herbert List (1903–1975), Andreas Feininger (1906–1999), and Horst P. Horst (1906–1999). Hoyningen-Huene and Horst — both gay, both moving between Europe and the U.S. — helped refine that polished, classical, technically controlled style where the male body became both sculpture and fantasy at the same time.


10. Male Nude -1927 - George Hoyningen-Huenen



11. George Hoyningen-Huenen directing a shot


12. Liguria Portofino, Italy - 1936 - Herbert List



13. Andreas Feininger - Self-Portrait


Looking back now, it’s hard not to see clear lines connecting the Weimar Republic to mid-century American physique photography: Hirschfeld opening early conversations around sexuality before Alfred Kinsey, Turnverein and FKK feeding the rise of physical culture icons like Charles Atlas and Jack LaLanne, and photographers like Hoyningen-Huene, List, and Horst helping shape the visual language later carried forward by George Platt Lynes, Earl Forbes, and Bruce Bellas. Different countries, different decades, but the same fascination with the male body as something athletic, artistic, sensual, mythic, and modern all at once.


14. Male Nude (Hands Behind Buttocks) - Horst P. Horst



15. Horst P. Horst with fashion model


Comments?

As I took a deeper dive into the Weimar Republic, it became pretty clear this whole period could fuel an entirely separate blog — or a book, so thank you for taking on the unusually text-heavy post.  Would love to hear any thoughts you might have on all this.




2 comments:

Weimar Republic - Part 2

Today we move into two other art movements evolving in connection with the Weimar Republic;   Bauhaus   (1919–1933) , which stripped things ...