Classical music, theatre, and opera on the Ring Vienna has a long-standing tradition of art and culture, encompassing theatre, opera, classical music, and fine arts. The
Burgtheater is considered one of the premier theatres in the German-speaking world alongside its branch, the
Akademietheater. The
Volkstheater and the
Theater in der Josefstadt also enjoy good reputations. There is also a multitude of smaller theatres, in many cases devoted to less mainstream forms of the performing arts, such as modern or experimental plays, as well as
cabaret. The city is also home to several opera houses, including the
Theater an der Wien, the
Staatsoper, and the
Volksoper, the latter being devoted to the typical Viennese
operetta. in the
StadtparkVienna has long been a hub for classical music, nurturing both native composers and musicians who moved there to work. Notable composers born in Vienna include
Franz Schubert,
Arnold Schoenberg,
Alban Berg,
Anton Webern,
Joseph Lanner,
Johann Strauss I, and
Johann Strauss II. Violinist
Fritz Kreisler and electronic music pioneer
Louie Austen also hail from the city. Many influential composers relocated to Vienna, including
Joseph Haydn,
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,
Ludwig van Beethoven,
Johannes Brahms,
Franz Liszt,
Gustav Mahler,
Anton Bruckner, and
Antonio Salieri. The city also hosted premieres of operas such as
Fidelio, Die Fledermaus, The Gypsy Baron, The Magic Flute, and
The Marriage of Figaro. Vienna continues to be a centre for classical performances, with venues like the
Wiener Musikverein, home of the
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, famous for its
annual New Year's Concert, and the
Wiener Konzerthaus, headquarters of the
Vienna Symphony Orchestra. Many concerts cater to tourists, featuring music by Mozart and the Strauss family. Up until 2005, the Theater an der Wien hosted premieres of musicals, but since 2006 (a year dedicated to the 250th anniversary of Mozart's birth), it has devoted itself to opera again, becoming a stagione opera house offering one new production each month. Since 2012, Theater an der Wien has taken over the Wiener Kammeroper, a historically small theatre in the first district of Vienna, seating 300 spectators, turning it into its second venue for smaller-sized productions and chamber operas created by the young ensemble of Theater an der Wien (JET). Before 2005, the most successful musical was
Elisabeth, which was later translated into several languages and performed around the world. The
Wiener Taschenoper is dedicated to stage music of the 20th and 21st centuries. The
Haus der Musik museum ("House of Music") opened in 2000. Founded in 1963 and located in
Josefstadt, the
Vienna’s English Theatre (VET) is the oldest English-language theatre in continental Europe. in the Burggarten
Popular music Vienna has made significant contributions to
pop music, with pioneers of
Austropop such as
Georg Danzer,
Rainhard Fendrich,
Wolfgang Ambros, and
Peter Cornelius.
Willi Resetarits lived in the city from the age of three. The internationally best-known Viennese artist was
Falco, whose song ”
Rock Me Amadeus” is the only German-language song to reach
number 1 on the
American Billboard Hot 100, which it held for three weeks in
1986. His other hits, such as “
Der Kommissar” and “
Jeanny” also charted internationally. The founder of the American
jazz fusion band
Weather Report and
Miles Davis collaborator,
Joe Zawinul, was born in Vienna and studied music at the
Conservatory of Vienna. in 2007Current artists include
Rapper RAF Camora, hip-hop-musician
Yung Hurn and indie pop band
Wanda. Multiple popular songs have been written about Vienna, such as
"Vienna" (1977) by
Billy Joel,
"Vienna" (1981) by
Ultravox, and "
Vienna Calling" by
Falco. The
Wienerlied is a unique song genre from Vienna. They are sung in
Viennese dialect and often centre around the city. There are approximately 60,000 – 70,000 Wienerlieder. Every year, the Donauinsel stages the
Donauinselfest, the largest open-air music festival in the world, with approximately 3 million attendees over three days. The festival is organised by the
SPÖ Wien and is free to enter. The
Vienna Jazz Festival has taken place almost every year since 1991 and has featured artists such as
Nina Simone,
Miles Davis,
Dizzy Gillespie, and
Ravi Shankar. Concert venues in the city include the
Stadthalle, which hosted the
2015 Eurovision Song Contest, and the
Ernst-Happel-Stadion.
Cinema Films set in Vienna include
Amadeus,
Before Sunrise,
The Third Man,
The Living Daylights and
Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation. Notable actors born in the city include
Hedy Lamarr,
Christoph Waltz,
Christiane Hörbiger,
Eric Pohlmann,
Boris Kodjoe,
Christine Buchegger,
Senta Berger, and
Christine Ostermayer. Many filmmakers, such as
Michael Haneke and
Fritz Lang, were born in Vienna.
Billy Wilder and
Otto Preminger also lived in the city, with Preminger studying and beginning his career there. Vienna's cinemas include the Apollo Kino and
Cineplexx Donauzentrum and many
English language cinemas, including the Haydn Kino, Artis International and the Burg Kino, which screens
The Third Man, a 1949 film set in Vienna, three times a week. Every October since 1960, the city has staged the
Viennale, an international film festival which screens several different
genres of films and many
premieres.
Literature Notable writers from Vienna include
Carl Julius Haidvogel,
Franz Grillparzer, and
Stefan Zweig. Writers who lived and worked in Vienna include
Ingeborg Bachmann,
Thomas Bernhard,
Elias Canetti,
Ernst von Feuchtersleben,
Elfriede Jelinek,
Franz Kafka,
Karl Kraus,
Robert Musil,
Arthur Schnitzler, and
Bertha von Suttner.
Science Scientists and intellectuals who were born, lived, or worked in Vienna include: •
Biology:
Konrad Lorenz,
Karl von Frisch,
Max Perutz •
Computer Science:
Heinz Zemanek •
Chemistry:
Karl Kordesch,
Walter Kohn,
Carl and
Gerti Cori,
Richard Kuhn • Economics:
Eugen Böhm von Bawerk,
Ludwig von Mises,
Friedrich Hayek,
Rudolf Hilferding • Engineering:
Viktor Kaplan,
Robert Adler,
Paul Eisler,
Siegfried Marcus •
Jurisprudence:
Hans Kelsen,
Karl Renner • Mathematics:
Kurt Gödel • Medicine:
Ignaz Semmelweis,
Ferdinand von Hebra,
Karl Landsteiner,
Hans Asperger,
Carl von Rokitansky,
Julius Wagner-Jauregg,
Robert Bárány,
Theodor Billroth,
Karl Koller • Philosophy:
Karl Popper,
Ludwig Wittgenstein,
Paul Feyerabend,
Moritz Schlick •
Physics:
Lise Meitner,
Erwin Schrödinger,
Wolfgang Pauli,
Ludwig Boltzmann,
Victor Franz Hess,
Ernst Mach,
Christian Doppler,
Josef Stefan,
Anton Zeilinger •
Psychology:
Sigmund Freud,
Alfred Adler,
Viktor Frankl • Sociology:
Karl Polanyi,
Otto Bauer,
Max Adler Museums The majority of
museums in Vienna are located in an area on the border of Innere Stadt and Neubau in the centre of the city, from the museums inside the
Hofburg to the
MuseumsQuartier, with the twin
Naturhistorisches Museum and
Kunsthistorisches Museum in between. This area is home to many museums, such as: • In and around the
Hofburg: •
Imperial Treasury: A collection of European treasures, including the
Imperial Regalia of the
Holy Roman Emperor and the
Imperial Crown of Austria • Sisi Museum: Dedicated to
Empress Elisabeth of Austria, allowing visitors to view the imperial apartments. •
Weltmuseum Wien: An
anthropological museum housing many
ethnographic objects from Africa, America, Asia, and Oceania, such as
Moctezuma's headdress. • House of Austrian History •
Globe Museum •
Esperanto Museum and Collection of Planned Languages •
Austrian National Library •
Ephesos Museum •
Albertina: An art museum featuring approximately 65,000
drawings and one million
old master prints, with works by
Leonardo da Vinci,
Claude Monet and
Albrecht Dürer.
Young Hare by Dürer is perhaps the most well-known painting in the museum. on Maria-Theresien-Platz • On
Maria-Theresien-Platz: Two almost identical buildings were completed in 1891 and opened by Emperor
Franz Joseph I. •
Kunsthistorisches Museum: an art museum featuring works from artists such as
Pieter Bruegel the Elder,
Caravaggio,
Albrecht Dürer,
Raphael,
Rembrandt,
Titian and
Vermeer. Notable works include
The (Great) Tower of Babel and
The Hunters in the Snow (both by
Bruegel)
, •
Naturhistorisches Museum: A natural history museum with 30 million objects in its collection, of which 100,000 are on display. A notable exhibit is the
Venus of Willendorf, a 25,000-year-old statue found in Austria. • In the
MuseumsQuartier: The former imperial stalls were converted to a group of museums in the late 1990s and opened in 2001. •
MUMOK (Museum of
Modern Art): A modern and
contemporary art museum housing works from artists such as
Andy Warhol,
Roy Lichtenstein and
Pablo Picasso. •
Leopold Museum: A collection of modern
Austrian art featuring works by
Egon Schiele,
Gustav Klimt, as well as pieces from
Vienna Secession,
Viennese Modernism and Austrian Expressionism. •
Kunsthalle Wien •
ZOOM Kindermuseum •
Architekturzentrum Wien The
Österreichische Galerie Belvedere at the
Belvedere presents art from Austria from the
Middle Ages through the
Baroque to the early 20th century, including
The Kiss, Gustav Klimt's most famous work. It also houses the Baroque Museum with
Franz Xaver Messerschmidt's famous character heads. In 2011, Belvedere 21 (formerly 21er Haus) was reopened in its immediate vicinity as a branch of contemporary art. '' in the
Belvedere The
Vienna Museum documents the history of Vienna with a permanent presentation and temporary exhibitions and presents the memorials to Ludwig van Beethoven, Joseph Haydn, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Franz Schubert, and Johann Strauss. Other branches of the museum include the
Hermesvilla in the
Lainzer Tiergarten, the Vienna Clock Museum, the Roman Museum, and the Prater Museum. The former imperial summer residence at
Schönbrunn Palace, Vienna's most visited attraction, is set up as a museum with the palace's showrooms and the
Imperial Carriage Museum. The
Museum of Military History in the
Arsenal is the leading museum of the
Austrian Armed Forces and documents the history of the
Austrian military with exhibits including
weapons,
armour,
tanks, aircraft,
uniforms,
battle flags,
paintings,
medals and decorations, photographs,
battleship models and documents. Other museums in the city include: •
House of Music, a music museum in the former palace of
Archduke Charles, where
Otto Nicolai, founder of the
Vienna Philharmonic, once lived. •
Haus des Meeres, a public aquarium in a
WWII flak tower. •
Museum of Art Fakes •
KunstHausWien •
Museum of Applied Arts •
Liechtenstein Museum •
Sigmund Freud Museum, a museum about
Freud’s life at his old residence. •
Mozarthaus Vienna •
Dritte Mann Museum, centred around the 1949 British film
The Third Man, set in post-World War II Vienna •
Liechtenstein Museum •
Jewish Museum Vienna, founded in 1896, is the oldest of its kind. • Money Museum, owned by the
Austrian National Bank • Museum of
illusions
Architecture , designed in
Art Nouveau style A variety of architectural styles have been preserved in Vienna, including
Romanesque and
Baroque architecture. The
Vienna Secession, an art movement closely related to
Art Nouveau, has left many architectural traces in Vienna.
Otto Wagner designed many buildings in the city, including the
Secession building,
Karlsplatz Stadtbahn Station, the
Kirche am Steinhof, and the
Austrian Postal Savings Bank, many of which rank among the best-known examples of Art Nouveau in the world. The
Wiener Moderne shunned the use of extraneous adornment. Architect
Adolf Loos is responsible for the
Looshaus (1909), the Kärntner Bar (1908), and the
Steiner House (1910). The
Hundertwasserhaus by
Friedensreich Hundertwasser, designed to counter the clinical look of modern architecture, is one of Vienna's most popular
tourist attractions. Hundertwasser also designed the
KunstHausWien and the Spittelau heating plant. In the 1990s, several quarters were adapted and extensive building projects were implemented in the areas around
Donaustadt and
Wienerberg. Vienna has seen numerous architectural projects completed, which combine modern architectural elements with old buildings, such as the remodeling and revitalization of the old
Gasometer in 2001. The
DC Towers are located on the northern bank of the Danube and were completed in 2013.
Places of worship Due to the prevalence of Christianity in the city, most places of worship are churches and
cathedrals. Most notable are: •
St. Rupert's Church (ca. 800), considered the oldest church in the city. •
St. Stephen's Cathedral (1137), the
Gothic mother church of the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vienna, one of the city's most recognizable symbols. Located in the
Stephansplatz in the center of town, it is a popular tourist attraction. •
Schottenkirche (12th century), founded by Irish
Benedictine monks as the
parish church of the
Schottenstift. •
Maria am Gestade (1414), one of Vienna's oldest churches and an example of Gothic architecture. •
Capuchin Church (1632), home to the
Imperial Crypt, the burial site of many members of the
Habsburg family. •
Karlskirche (1737), a
Baroque church in the
Karlsplatz and a popular tourist attraction. •
Peterskirche (early 18th century), located near the
Graben and a major tourist destination. •
Votivkirche (1879), built on the Ringstraße as an expression of gratitude after
Emperor Franz Joseph survived an assassination attempt in 1853. •
St. Francis of Assisi Church (1910), a
Basilica-style church on the bank of the Danube on the
Mexikoplatz, is administered by the
Order of the Holy Trinity. Other notable churches include the
Augustinian Church, the
Church of St. Maria Rotunda, the
Church of St. Leopold, the
Franciscan Church, the
Jesuit Church and the
Minoritenkirche. Vienna's biggest
mosque is the
Vienna Islamic centre in
Kaisermühlen, which is financed by the
Muslim World League. The mosque features a 32-metre-high
minaret and a
dome 16 metres high, with a 20-metre radius. In addition, there are over 100 further mosques in the city. Before the
November pogroms of 1938, also known as the Kristallnacht, Vienna had 24
synagogues and 78 prayer houses. Only one synagogue, the
Stadttempel, survived the destruction.
Ball dances The first
balls in Vienna were held in the 18th century. The ball season takes place annually during
Carnival, running from 11 November to
Shrove Tuesday. Many balls are held in the
Hofburg,
Rathaus and
Musikverein. Guests adhere to a strict dress code; men are required to wear
black or
white tie, while women must wear
ball gowns. Debutants of the ball wear white. The balls are opened with dances, traditionally including a Viennese waltz, at around 22:00, and close at about 05:00 the next morning. Food served at the balls includes sausages with bread, and
goulash. Notable Viennese balls include the
Vienna Opera Ball, the
Vienna Ball of Sciences, the Wiener Akademikerball, and the Hofburg Silvesterball. The Wiener Akademikerball in the Hofburg has attracted lots of controversy for being a gathering for
far-right politicians and groups. The ball is hosted by the
FPÖ, the right-wing populist party of Austria, and has attracted multiple right-wing and far-right personalities, such as
Martin Sellner and
Marine Le Pen. Since 2008, annual demonstrations organised by various groups have protested against the event. Former leader of the FPÖ
Heinz-Christian Strache compared
anti-fascist protesters to a
Nazi mob, alleging that the ball attendees were being treated as "
new Jews".
Language Vienna is part of the
Austro-Bavarian language area, in particular
Central Bavarian (
Mittelbairisch). The Viennese dialect takes many loanwords from languages of the former Habsburg Monarchy, especially Czech. The dialect differs from the west of Austria in its pronunciation and grammar. Features typical of Viennese German include
Monophthongization, the transformation of a
diphthong into a
monophthong (German
heiß (hot) into Viennese
haas) and the lengthening of vowels (
Heeaasd, i bin do ned bleeed, wooos waaasn ii, wea des woooa (Standard German
Hörst du, ich bin doch nicht blöd, was weiß denn ich, wer das war): "Listen, I'm not stupid; what do I know, who that was?"). Speakers of the dialect tend to avoid the
genitive case.
LGBTQ Vienna is regarded as the centre of
LGBTQ+ life in Austria. The city has implemented an action plan against
homophobic discrimination and has maintained an anti-discrimination unit within its administration since 1998. The city has several cafés, bars, and clubs frequented by the
LGBTQ+ community, including the
Café Savoy, a traditional coffee house established in 1896. In 2015, ahead of hosting the
Eurovision Song Contest, Vienna introduced traffic lights featuring same-sex couples, attracting international media attention. Multiple
rainbow crossings are dotted around the city.
Vienna's Pride Parade is held every
June. In 2019, when the parade hosted
EuroPride, it attracted around 500,000 visitors. == Social infrastructure ==