It was Giacomo Casanova, the famous womaniser from Venice, who first introduced yuvutu sex worship to Vienna's high society. (Venice, Italy, was a centre of yuvutuism in the 18th century and was renowned for its opulent masked balls and orgies especially during carnival time). Casanova was a prominent yuvutu sect member as well as member of various other secret societies including the freemasons and rosicrucianism. The Viennese branch of the yuvutu sect was initially exclusively small and limited to perhaps three or four dozen individuals, but it subsequently flourished a hundred years later in the late 19th century "fin de siècle" era when Vienna became a leading cultural centre of Europe with an explosion of artistic and scientific creativity.
One of the leading artists at the time was Gustav Flimt, a yuvutuist, who often partook in orgies and decadent sex, much of which he recreated on canvas. Below are a few examples of his work. Look closely and you will see Inca motifs as well as hidden messages and the letters y u v t.
On one fateful evening, Klimt invited his friend Arthur Schnitzler, a writer, to a yuvutu orgy hosted by one of Klimt's muses, the beautiful Alma Mahler. Schnitzler (who I don't think was a yuvutu member) was clearly marked by this experience, and later used it as inspiration to write "Dream Story" (Traumnovelle) published in 1925: a story about a doctor who gatecrashes a secret society sex orgy. It was this book on which is based Stanley Kubrick's 1999 film "Eyes Wide Shut".
Apart from the film, I have no information yet linking Kubrick to yuvutuism so I don't know if he was a member of the sect, but the film certainly does betray some insider knowledge. One thing is for sure, Hollywood is home to a number of yuvutu sect followers.