Mozart Week Mozart Week () is an annual festival devoted to performances of the composer's works. It was created in 1956 on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of his birth, and coincides with his birthday around 27 January. The festival attracts visitors from all over the world and typically includes opera performances, orchestral, chamber and recital concerts featuring world-class orchestras and artistes.
Concerts From October to June, seasonal concerts are held, including a chamber music series and cycles featuring the
Propter Homines organ, as well as performances by the
Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg and the
Camerata Salzburg chamber orchestra. To mark the Mozart Year in 2006, the "Dialogues" festival was added to Mozart Week, in which contemporary artists from the fields of music, dance, literature, and visual arts explore Mozart's life and work.
Maintenance of the Mozart museums According to its statutes, the International Mozarteum Foundation is responsible for the "dignified preservation of all Mozart memorial sites, in particular
Mozart's birthplace with the Mozart Museum,
Mozart's residence on Makartplatz and the
Magic Flute House in the bastion garden of the Mozarteum". In Mozart's birthplace and in Mozart's residence, the Foundation preserves an authentic and vivid image of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart across more than .
Mozart's Birthplace At Mozart's birthplace, located at Getreidegasse 9, visitors can explore three floors of Mozart's life, focusing on his youth, his friends and patrons, his relationships with his family, and his passion for opera. His childhood violin, personal mementos, and the most famous family portraits are also on display. The exhibition area "Mozart: Myth and Reverence" explores his time in Vienna, his musical achievements, his life circumstances, and his death. Other rooms are dedicated to the management of his musical estate by his widow and two sons, as well as the beginnings of the Mozart cult. Mozart's operatic works and his "daily life as a child prodigy" complete the picture of Mozart presented here.
Mozart's Residence The Dancing Master's House on Makartplatz, where the Mozart family lived from 1773 onwards, was two-thirds destroyed in a bombing raid during the Second World War; the section containing the Dancing Master's Hall survived. Subsequently, an insurance company built an office building on the site. After the International Mozarteum Foundation acquired the entire property, the office building was demolished, and the Dancing Master's House was meticulously reconstructed according to the original plans and opened in 1996. The Mozart Residence Museum presents portraits of individual family members, Mozart's compositional output during his Salzburg years, and the social milieu of the time. Particular attractions include Mozart's original fortepiano and the famous family portrait of the Mozarts.
Magic Flute House Adjoining the foyer of the Great Hall at the rear of the building, facing the Mirabell Gardens, is a small promenade garden. From 1950 to 2022, this garden housed the Magic Flute House, which was originally located in Vienna and later moved to the
Kapuzinerberg hill in Salzburg. It is said that Mozart composed (at least parts of) his opera
The Magic Flute there.
Scholarship The autograph collection, which can be viewed as part of exclusive guided tours, contains approximately 190 original letters by Mozart, about 370 letters by his father, and over 100 autograph manuscripts by Mozart, primarily musical sketches and drafts, but also some original scores. With around 35,000 titles, the Bibliotheca Mozartiana is the world's most comprehensive Mozart library. The historical-critical complete edition of the
Neue Mozart-Ausgabe (New Mozart Edition or NMA), on which work began in 1954, was completed in June 2007. A Digital Mozart Edition is being developed as a follow-up, making the text of the NMA, and thus all of Mozart's musical scores, freely accessible online and continuously updated. The Mozart sound and film collection comprises approximately 22,000 audio titles and 3,000 video productions (film documentaries, feature films and television films about Mozart, and recorded opera productions). Recent acquisitions include an autograph sheet of variations on "
Ah, vous dirai-je, maman" (2007) and a partial copy of a symphony movement by
Johann Michael Haydn (2010). A previously unknown piano piece by Mozart was discovered in March 2012.
Youth Work The Mozarteum Foundation's children's and youth programme focuses on experiencing music and conveying Mozart's thoughts and world of imagination. This programme has existed since 2008 and has been called
Klangkarton (Sound Cardboard) since 2012.
Awards The Foundation administers various awards such as the
Mozart Medal, the
Preis der Internationalen Stiftung Mozarteum, and the
Lilli Lehmann Medal. ==Organisational structure==