Agniel appeared in the November 15, 1926, issue of
Vogue, demonstrating slimming exercises in the form of floor stretches, with postures close to the
yoga asanas
Salabhasana,
Supta Virasana,
Sarvangasana and
Halasana. She wrote for
Physical Culture magazine in 1927 and 1928. She wrote a piece titled "The Mental Element in Our Physical Well-Being" for
The Nudist, an American magazine, in 1938; it showed
nude women practising yoga, accompanied by a text on attention to the breath. The social historian Sarah Schrank comments that it made perfect sense at this stage of the development of
yoga in America 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." In 1931 she wrote the book
The Art of the Body: Rhythmic Exercise for Health and Beauty, illustrated mainly with photographs of herself; she notes in the preface that her dance technique derives from
Ruth St. Denis (who in turn followed
François Delsarte), but that her "system of 'aesthetic athletics'" Agniel was depicted in an "elegant, though sharply ironic"
Palladium photographic print by the Canadian photographer
Margaret Watkins, titled "Head and Hand". It shows her hand holding a portrait sculpture head of herself by
Jo Davidson. File:Marguerite Agniel July-1923.jpg|Topless, c. 1923 File:Marguerite Agniel in a Buddha position with her legs crossed Wellcome V0048585.jpg|In "Buddha position",
Muktasana. Photograph by
John de Mirjian, c. 1928 File:Marguerite Agniel in Supta Virasana.jpg|In
Supta Virasana, demonstrating "A good exercise for the back and abdominal muscles". Photograph by
John de Mirjian, c. 1928 File:Marguerite Agniel as Mona Lisa by Robert Henri.jpg|"As
Mona Lisa" by
Robert Henri, c. 1929 == Reception ==