About this tour

What makes a mistake beautiful?

Throughout this week-long Study Tour, we’ll travel with this question as our guide. In workshops, museums, and cultural encounters across Vienna, we will explore the role of mistakes in creativity, learning, and personal growth. We’ll also examine how, when shared between individuals, cultures, and contexts, mistakes can fuel innovation and spark discoveries.

As the great German composer Ludwig van Beethoven once said:

“To play a wrong note is insignificant; to play without passion is inexcusable.”

Beethoven valued the pursuit of excellence over the illusion of perfection, recognizing mistakes as a natural part of creativity and development. A century later, the Austrian artist, environmentalist, and architect Friedensreich Hundertwasser challenged another kind of perfection, declaring:

“The straight line leads to the downfall of humanity.”

His buildings burst with irregular curves, unexpected colors, and playful asymmetry—celebrating uniqueness and imperfection as the soul of art and life.

And in the realm of psychology, the Austrian neurologist, psychologist, philosopher, and Holocaust survivor Viktor Frankl reminded us:

“When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.”

Frankl’s life and work show how even life’s most painful setbacks can become sources of meaning and personal transformation.

On this tour, we follow their lead by embracing the wrong notes, the crooked lines, and the unexpected turns that make creativity – and life – worth living.

Learning outcomes

  • Explore and discuss theory and current research from multiple perspectives and in a European and global context
  • Gain a deeper and more nuanced understanding of how classroom theories apply to the real-world environment
  • Develop a deeper insight into Austria through exposure to its culture, history, and socioeconomic landscape
  • Engage in your personal learning process outside the classroom and emerge yourself in a vast variety of experiential learning activities intertwining academics, history, and culture

Possible activities

  • Play with wrong notes and passion at the Haus der Musik, an interactive sound museum where you can conduct a virtual orchestra, remix famous compositions, and explore how even musical “errors” can lead to unexpected beauty
  • Step into Hundertwasser’s world at the Hundertwasser House, where colorful curves, uneven floors, and wild greenery show how breaking rules in design can create joy, surprise, and lasting cultural impact
  • Put Tal Ben-Shahar’s statement “Learn to fail, or fail to learn” into practice in creative workshops such as a cooking class or a watercolor painting session, where trial, error, and improvisation are part of the process
  • Visit the Viktor Frankl Zentrum to explore how meaning can be found in adversity, and discuss how reframing mistakes and challenges can foster resilience, purpose, and growth