, 1922 Karoline Sophie Marie Wiegmann was born in
Hanover,
Province of Hanover in the
Kingdom of Prussia. Wiegmann was the daughter of a bicycle dealer. Already as a child, she was called Mary, "because the Hanoverians were once kings of England and the
House of Welf pride never quite got over the decline of the
Kingdom of Hanover to a Prussian province.
Development of expressionist dance, early career Wigman spent her youth in Hanover, England, the Netherlands and Lausanne. Wigman came to dance comparatively late after seeing three students of
Émile Jaques-Dalcroze, who aimed to approach music through movement using three equally important elements:
solfège,
improvisation and his own system of movements—
Dalcroze eurhythmics. Wigman studied rhythmic gymnastics in
Hellerau from 1910 to 1911 with Émile Jaques-Dalcroze and
Suzanne Perrottet, but felt artistically dissatisfied there: Like Suzanne Perrottet, Mary Wigman was also looking for movements independent of music and independent physical expression. After that, she stayed in Rome and Berlin. Another key early experience was a solo concert by
Grete Wiesenthal. on
Lake Maggiore, enrolled at the Rudolf von Laban School for Art, between 1913 and 1918 The Jaques-Dalcroze school's practice made dance secondary to music, so Wigman decided to take her interests elsewhere. In 1913, on advice from the German-Danish expressionist painter
Emil Nolde, she entered the
Rudolf von Laban School for Art (
Schule für Kunst) on
Monte Verità in the Swiss canton of
Ticino. Laban was significantly involved in the development of modern expressive dance (
Labanotation). She enrolled in one of Laban's summer courses and was instructed in his technique. Following their lead, she worked on a technique based on contrasts of movement; expansion and contraction, pulling and pushing. She continued with the Laban school through the Swiss summer sessions and the
Munich winter sessions until 1919. In
Munich, Wigman showed her first public dances
Hexentanz I,
Lento and
Ein Elfentanz. During the
First World War she stayed in Switzerland with Laban as his assistant and taught in
Zürich and
Ascona. Wigman performed this program again in Zürich in 1919 and later in Germany. Only the performances in
Hamburg and
Dresden brought her the big breakthrough.
Weimar Republic period In 1920, Wigman was offered the post of ballet mistress at the
Saxon State Opera in Dresden, but, after taking up residence in a hotel in Dresden and beginning to teach dance classes while awaiting her anticipated appointment, she learned that the position had been awarded to someone else. In the same year, Wigman together with her assistant Bertha Trümpy, opened a school for modern dance on
Bautzner Strasse in Dresden. During Wigman's time in Dresden, Wigman had contacts with the city's lively art scene, for example with the German expressionist painter
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. Rivalry and competition between Wigman's new school and the old schools of dance in Dresden would emerge, later especially with former students and teachers of the
Palucca School of Dance.
Ursula Cain was also one of Wigman's students. On tour, Wigman travelled throughout Germany and neighbouring countries with her chamber dance group. In 1928, Wigman performed for the first time in
London and in 1930 in the
United States. In the 1920s, Wigman was the idol of a movement that wanted dance free of being subordinate to music. Wigman rarely danced to music not composed for her. It was often only danced to the accompaniment of gongs or drums and in rare cases without any music at all, which was particularly popular in intellectual circles.
Selected works choreographed and dance school success Wigman ceaselessly created and choreographed new solo dances, including
Tänze der Nacht,
Der Spuk,
Vision (all 1920),
Tanzrhythmen I and II,
Tänze des Schweigens (all 1920–23),
Die abendlichen Tänze (1924),
Visionen (1925),
Helle Schwingungen (1927),
Schwingende Landschaft (1929) and
Das Opfer (1931). Group dances were titled
Die Feier I (1921),
Die sieben Tänze des Lebens (1921),
Szenen aus einem Tanzdrama (1923/24),
Raumgesänge (1926),
Die Feier II (1927/28) and
Der Weg (1932). In 1930, Wigman worked at the Munich Dancers' Congress as a choreographer and dancer in the choir work
Das Totenmal created by in honour of the dead of World War I. By 1927, Wigman had 360 students in Dresden alone, and more than 1,200 students were taught at branches operated by former students in Berlin, Frankfurt, Chemnitz, Riesa, Hamburg, Leipzig, Erfurt, Magdeburg, Munich, and Freiburg, including from 1931 one in New York City by former student
Hanya Holm. Wigman's work in the United States is credited to her protegee
Hanya Holm, and then to Holm's students
Alwin Nikolais and Joan Woodbury. Another student and protegee of Wigman, Margret Dietz, taught in America from 1953 to 1972. During this time, Wigman's style was characterized by critics as "tense, introspective, and sombre," yet there was always an element of "radiance found even in her darkest compositions." ==Dance under National Socialism==