
With flowers in a boat ยท 1910

images that haunt us
















Brรถyerismin paluu โ unohdettu runotanssi jรคlleen nรคyttรคmรถlle
Brรถyerism Returns โ The forgotten art of ‘poetry dance’ returns on stage
The colourful life and diverse career of dance artist Martta Brรถyer (1897โ1979) has recently been showcased in the museumโs book about the Burgherโs House, the oldest wooden residential building in central Helsinki. Martta Brรถyer inherited the house from her mother, renovated and preserved it, and finally sold it to the City for it to be used as a museum. During the book project, Brรถyerโs extensive archives were studied in detail for the first time, and plenty of new information was discovered about her life events. โฃ
A pioneer of modern dance in Finland, Brรถyer created her own controversial style, brรถyerism, that combined dance with poetry recitation in the 1920s and 1930s.ย She drew inspiration from Germany, from the school of world-famous Mary Wigman, and developed her own style in the 1920s and 30s based on Wigmanโs ideas. Brรถyer started to teach the style in her own institute. A dancer and choreographer, Brรถyer herself found that her most important career was that of a dance pedagogue. โฃ
The Brรถyer style, brรถyerism, was based on dance without music, only accompanied by poetry recitation. Reflecting the spirit of her time, Brรถyer combined modern dance with national romanticism and created dance performances based on the collection of Finnish folk poems, Kanteletar, among other works. Her contemporariesโ reactions varied: the new style received both praise and harsh, even crushing criticism. Despite this, Brรถyer determinedly continued with her style until the 1960s. She received the Pro Finlandia medal for her lifeโs work in 1956. โฃ
text source: Helsinki City Museum ~ Helsingin kaupunginmuseo