Volkskundemuseum Wien
Otto Wagner Areal, Pavillon 1
Baumgartner Höhe 1, 1140 Wien
Öffnungszeiten:
Di-Fr: 10-17 Uhr
Anfahrt
Postanschrift:
Laudongasse 15-19, 1080 Wien
T: +43 1 406 89 05
F: +43 1 406 89 05.88
E: office@volkskundemuseum.at
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Mostothek @ OWA
Mai-Sep: Dienstags, 17 Uhr
our presences will magically transform the Volkskundemuseum Wien into a club of sensation and kink.
come dance with us while we invite you to make it rain for a good cause strip club style. choose to come as our club-guest or imagine yourself as a stripper wearing sexy seductive kinky outfit expressing how you celebrate your own sensuality. lace, latex and leather are very welcome!
Soft Club is a project by Marissa Lôbo and Negin Rezaie, where celebration meets intimacy. It's not just a club; it's a space where joy thrives, connections deepen, and community bonds are forged. Join us in transforming museum spaces into vibrant hubs of connection on this Saturday afternoon and evening.
Soft club is supported by Volkskundemuseum Wien.
Soft Club: The Politics of Hospitality, Body, Space and Celebration
Soft Club is a platform for rethinking the politics of hospitality, the body, and space. A site where pleasure, solidarity, and collective action intertwine.
In this project, the format of the “strip club” is not approached merely as entertainment, but as a form of embodied political practice that confronts and reconfigures gendered, economic, and cultural norms.
Within this context, stripping becomes a mode of reclaiming the body from the logics of consumption, shame, and objectification.
Acts of undressing here are not performances for the gaze of others, but invitations to co-presence, simultaneity, and shared vulnerability.
Through the politics of hospitality, we aim to invert the power relations inherent in hosting and visibility: Who extends the invitation? Who is being seen? And how can bodies transform space into a site of resistance, pleasure, and mutual care?
Soft Club understands celebration as a means of reimagining community, a form of gathering that arises not from forgetting, but from awareness of fragility and desire. Here, both body and space are political terrains; and hosting becomes a practice of redistributing power, intimacy, and respect.
Please note: since we have limited space, we recommend arriving on time.




