In 1925 the couple had one daughter, Liselotte, portrayed with her mother in a Madonna and Child image of that year. Julia Secklehner identifies it, and Koppitz's 'self-portrait' nude
In the Arms of Nature, most likely a collaborative effort by the couple, as adhering to the
Körperkult ('cult of the body') and the naturist
heimat sentiment in its alpine setting and heroic low-angle viewpoint. In the 1930s their style shifted toward the
Neue Sachlichkeit, anti-expressionist objectivity then predominant in photography of Central Europe. The FiFo ("Internationale Ausstellung des Deutschen Werkbundes – Film und Foto") came to Vienna after being shown in
Stuttgart and decisively influenced the Koppitz couple's artistic development. The
Neues Sehen (New Vision) led them to a more factual and documentary oriented photography of themes from rustic life; ethnographic records of the peasant archetype, eulogised as the archaic essence of Germanic peoples, at first mystical and quasi-theosophical, but progressively more chauvinist and nationalistic under the Austrian chancellor dictatorship initiated by
Engelbert Dollfuss of 1933. In 1936, the most comprehensive exhibition of Rudolf's work, a survey of 500 works of rustic subjects took place, entitled "Country and People", at the Museum of Art and Industry. Rudolf died that same year. Also in 1936
Adolf Hitler remilitarised western German lands near the Rhine River and the eastern border of France, a provocation that defied the terms of the
Versailles Treaty, which had prohibited Germany from keeping troops in that territory. His death may have saved Rudolf's considerable reputation as a highly regarded
art photographer; whether he favoured Hitler has not been discovered. However
völkisch ideologies, those embedded in the couple's imagery, were instrumental to
Nazism. == Reich School series ==