Between the wars , here in
Siddhasana, brought the practice of
asanas to the United States in 1919. Yoga
asanas were brought to the United States in 1919 by
Yogendra, sometimes called "the Father of the Modern Yoga Renaissance", his system influenced by the
physical culture of
Max Müller; his Yoga Institute of America in
Harriman, New York, operated for a few years. The following year, the Hindu spiritual leader
Paramahansa Yogananda spoke about
Kriya Yoga in Boston, and in 1925 he founded the
Self-Realization Fellowship in Los Angeles, where he taught yoga, including asanas, breathing, chanting and meditation, to tens of thousands of Americans, as described in his classic 1946 book
Autobiography of a Yogi. in
Supta Virasana, wearing a silver-colored bikini with matching turban. Studio photograph by
John de Mirjian, Yoga and meditation appear in
Marguerite Agniel's 1931 book
The Art of the Body: Rhythmic Exercise for Health and Beauty, illustrated with
studio photographs by
John de Mirjian of Agniel sitting with eyes closed for meditation in
Siddhasana, reclining in
Supta Virasana, and inverted in
Halasana, in each case dressed in a shining silver bikini with matching turban. Agniel wrote a piece for
The Nudist in 1938 showing nude women practicing yoga, accompanied by a text on attention to the breath. The social historian Sarah Schrank comments that it made perfect sense to combine
nudism and yoga, as "both were exercises in healthful living; both were countercultural and bohemian; both highlighted the body; and both were sensual without being explicitly erotic."
Theos Bernard's 1943
Hatha Yoga: The Report of a Personal Experience presented
hatha yoga as a complex, difficult practice requiring serious commitment, and was the first to include a set of high-quality photographs of some 30 asanas. He was Pierre Bernard's nephew, and contrary to his implication that he had learnt hatha yoga from a guru in India, his teacher was in all probability his father.
After the Second World War In 1948,
Indra Devi, a pupil of the modern yoga pioneer
Tirumalai Krishnamacharya, opened her Hollywood yoga studio, teaching asanas to celebrities such as the actress
Gloria Swanson. The effect was to make yoga glamorous and acceptable,
especially to women. The Indian yoga guru and peace activist
Swami Vishnudevananda came to San Francisco in 1958, going on to found the
Sivananda Yoga Vedanta Centres worldwide, with its headquarters in Montreal, Canada. His
The Complete Illustrated Book of Yoga (1960) was the first major illustrated guide, showing and describing some 90 yoga asanas and numerous variations in 146 monochrome plates, many of them full-page. 's 1959
Yoga for Americans encouraged women to practice at home. On the cover (top left), she wears her characteristic
sari.
Richard Hittleman launched his yoga television show,
Yoga for Health, in 1961, enabling him to sell millions of copies of his books on yoga. He carefully minimized yoga's
esoteric aspects such as
kundalini and the
subtle body, though personally he believed the goal of yoga was indeed "
pure bliss consciousness". Both the show and the books presented yoga to a wide audience across the United States. Other yoga television shows followed, including
Lilias Folan's
WCET series
Lilias, Yoga and You!, which ran from the 1970s to the 1990s, helping to make yoga acceptable to the public throughout the country. In 1966, another of Krishnamacharya's pupils, his brother-in-law
B.K.S. Iyengar, published his influential
Light on Yoga, with unprecedentedly precise descriptions and illustrations of some 200 asanas in 600 monochrome photographs. His student
Mary Dunn helped to set up the
Iyengar Yoga Institute in San Francisco in 1978, and then the Iyengar Yoga Association of New York. Also in 1966,
Amrit Desai began to teach yoga in Pennsylvania. He named his organization the
Kripalu Yoga Fellowship in 1974; it opened its current centre in Massachusetts in 1983, from where it teaches its own form of yoga, combining asanas, pranayama, and meditation. Yet another of Krishnamacharya's pupils,
K. Pattabhi Jois, came to the United States in 1975, starting a long-lasting craze in the country for
Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga. A
vinyasa is a movement that connects yoga poses together; the result is a continuously flowing sequence that can be learnt and practiced as a whole, making yoga into an energetic
aerobic exercise. Ashtanga Yoga gave rise to various spinoff styles including
Power Yoga in the 1990s, with one form created in 1995 by
Beryl Bender Birch and others by
Bryan Kest, a student of K. Pattabhi Jois, and
Baron Baptiste, trained in the
hot style of
Bikram Yoga.
Bikram Choudhury arrived in the United States in 1971, and by 1974 had created his own style of yoga, with the studios heated to . He was strongly charismatic, had been taught yoga by the bodybuilder
B. C. Ghosh, Yogananda's youngest brother, and like Jois saw
hatha yoga as a religion. The two men made yoga serious, hard work, with an intensity that demanded a lifestyle arranged around yoga; up to that point, it had been seen as a slow, gentle,
feminine form of exercise, and classes had consisted mainly of women. Practice was so hot and sweaty, and required such mobility, that clothing was reduced to a new minimum: men often wore nothing but long shorts, while women wore footless
leggings,
sports bras, and small
tank tops. == Yoga as spiritual practice ==