nature and
the Healthy
Body
Modernism’s engagement with the social world
was also characterized by a deep concern for
health and hygiene. World War I and the ensuing
flu epidemic had killed millions internationally;
consequently health was seen as a metaphor
for a new life and bright future. In practical terms,
it meant that both private and public buildings
were designed with modern healthy amenities
ranging from indoor plumbing and hygienic
kitchens to swimming pools, gyms, and sun decks.
A focus on the healthy body can also be seen
throughout the mass media and visual arts,
which were permeated with images of sportsmen
and women, dancers and gymnasts, swimmers
and sunbathers.
During the 1930s especially, some avant-garde
designers and architects shifted their attention
away from the machine-inspired forms of the
1920s and toward the organic materials and
curvilinear shapes of nature. Some embraced
natural materials such as stone, wood, and organic
textiles, finding new, more gentle alternatives
to the technological focus of the factory.
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Alexander Rodchenko,
Dive, 1935
Vintage gelatin silver print, Courtesy of Pace/MacGill Gallery, Edwynn Houk Gallery, and Kicken Berlin Gallery, © Estate of Alexander Rodchenko/RAO,
Moscow/VAGA, New York, NY.
 Richard Neutra
Lovell “Health” House,
Los Angeles, California, 1929,
Photo: Julius Shulman, Gelatin silver print, 1950 © J. Paul Getty Trust. Used
with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the
Getty Research Institute
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