The term first appears around 1927 to identify a particular style of dance emerging from within the new forms of 'expressionist dance' developing in Central Europe since 1917. Its main exponents include
Mary Wigman,
Kurt Jooss and
Rudolf Laban. The term reappears in critical reviews in the 1980s to identify the work of primarily German choreographers who were students of Jooss (such as
Pina Bausch and
Reinhild Hoffmann) and Wigman (
Susanne Linke), along with the Austrian
Johann Kresnik. The development of the form and its concepts was influenced by
Bertolt Brecht and
Max Reinhardt, and the cultural ferment of the Weimar Republic.
Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch became internationally known. Bausch's dramaturge,
Raimund Hoghe, created independent productions from 1989. == Form ==