Holm had a unique form of technique that shaped generations of dancers and choreographers including
Alwin Nikolais,
Mary Anthony,
Valerie Bettis,
Don Redlich,
Maxine Munt,
Alfred Brooks,
Liz Aggiss and
Glen Tetley. Her technique stressed the importance of pulse, planes, floor patterns, aerial design, direction, and spatial dimensions. Holm's movement emphasized the freedom and flowing quality of the torso and back, but remained based on universal principles of physics for motion. Holm trained through
improvisation so, a specific movement vocabulary or phrasing that could be carried on through classes does not exist; instead her focus was about learning through discovery. Choreographically her movement focused on the body's relation to space and emotion, which was an extension of Wigman and
Rudolf Laban. She worked on movement that projected into space. Holm's stylistic idea was about "absolute dance" without pantomime or dramatic overtones. Attention to conveying an idea in her choreography was more important than the dancers' technical ability. Holm would say, "I want to see a sign of passion. I want to see the raw if struggling to express itself. A work must have blood." Invited by dance director
Martha Hill, Holm was one of the founding artists at
Bennington College in 1934 along with
Martha Graham,
Charles Weidman, and
Doris Humphrey, who came to be some of the most influential modern dancers of their time: "The Big Four". The
American Dance Festival (ADF) arose from Bennington College. This was an opportunity for modern dancers to come together to take class and present new works. Holm's first major work,
Trend, (1937) dealt with social criticism and incorporated
Ausdruckstanz and American techniques. In 1941, she started a Center of Dance in Colorado Springs where she had summer courses and was able to perfect her creative exploration technique. In 1948, she choreographed for Broadway:
Ballet Ballads and
Kiss Me, Kate which led to twelve other musicals. Holm's dance work
Metropolitan Daily was the first modern dance composition to be televised on NBC, and her
Labanotation score for
Kiss Me, Kate (1948) was the first choreography to be copyrighted in the United States. She also choreographed
Out of This World (1950),
The Liar (1950), ''
My Darlin' Aida (1952), The Golden Apple (1954), My Fair Lady (1956), Camelot (1960), and Anya
(1965). She also directed a 1960s television musical adaptation of Pinocchio. Holm choreographed extensively in the fields of concert dance and musical theatre. Other works by Holm include: Tragic Exodus
, They Too Are Exiles
, Dance Of Work and Play
and Dance Sonata'' ==As a dance educator==