Martin Mostböck, AID - ArchitectureInteriorsDesign, Vienna

Setting Things Up

Experiments and Processes in Architecture and Design

Exhibition:
28 March 2026 – 6 May 2026

Opening:
Friday, 27 March 2026, 18:30

Speaking at the opening:
Hans-Jürgen Commerell & Dan Dorocic
, Aedes, Berlin
Eberhard Schrempf, 
Culture and Creative Industries Manager, Graz
Martin Mostböck
, AID - ArchitectureInteriorsDesign, Vienna

Venue:

Aedes
Christinenstr. 18–19
10119 Berlin

Opening Hours:
Mon 13:00–17:00
Tue–Fri 11:00–18:30
Sun and public holidays 13:00–
17:00
Sat, 28 March 2026, 13:00–17:00

Download Press Material:
www.aedes-arc.de/cms/aedes/press



Event at the Austrian Cultural Forum Berlin
Somewhere between Architecture and Design
Talk with Martin Mostböck and Jörg Hugo

Date:
Thursday, 26 March 2026, 19:00

Venue:
Austrian Cultural Forum Berlin, Stauffenbergstr. 1, 10785 Berlin

Registration:
https://kulturforumberlin.at


 

Projektsponsoren

Aedes Cooperation Partners

 

powered by BauNetz

  • A Bunch of Holes, a table and three stools © Martin Mostböck

Martin Mostböck works across design, material and craft. The State of Things reveals how furniture,
objects and houses emerge from production, testing and experimentation. On display are chairs,
tables, lamps as well as residential houses and pavilions — works that make his distinctive material
language and hands-on, craft-based approach, tangible. As an architect and designer, he develops
ideas into objects: knife, saw and prototype in hand, he tests and shapes his designs, making
decisions through an immediate dialogue between material and production. Balancing functional
clarity with playful form, the works tell stories, shift scales and open new perspectives on space,
material and everyday life. The exhibition at Aedes presents a multifaceted view of a practice that
melds together processes from architecture to design through its craftsmanship.


A Bunch of Holes, Skizze © Martin Mostböck

For 25 years, Martin Mostböck has oscillated seamlessly between sketches, built architecture, furniture
design, interiors and industrial design. The exhibition invites visitors to look behind the scenes, focusing
on process, craftsmanship and material. Ideas that begin in a sketchbook end up on the workbench – and
become part of lived spaces.

Two boxy landscapes grow out of the exhibition space. One is dedicated to architectural works, presented
through working and scale models, plans and sections. The other, larger structure showcases the design
objects for which Mostböck is known: tables, chairs and lamps– each with its own design story. In this way,
industrial processes, craftsmanship and form become equally tangible. The exhibition brings together
unique one-off pieces as well as serial products, large and small.


Model of Room with a View, single-family house, Forchtenstein, AT | House for a Winegrower, single-family house, Horitschon, AT © Martin Mostböck | Living Garden, residential building, Vienna, AT © Paul Sebesta

Architectural Projects:

Living Garden, residential building, Seestadt, Aspern, Vienna, AT, 2019
Room with a View, single-family house, Forchtenstein, AT, 2021
House for a Winegrower, single-family house, Horitschon, AT, 2016
My Cousin’s House, single-family house, Oberpullendorf, AT, 2010
The Rough One, pavilion, Graz, AT, 2017

Design Objects:

FLAXX Chair, armchair, shell made of natural flax fibre, AT, 2015
Best Friends Chair, object, AT 1992/98
The Edge.01, floor lamp, AT, 2014
Garcia, armchair, AT, 2001
A Bunch of Holes, a table and three stools, AT, 2022
Konstantin Chair, armchair, AT, 2019
Kolonna, planter, CH, 2019
Hive, planter, CH, 2022–2025
Enzo, champagne cooler, AT, 2021
Brenner, bookends, DE, 2017
Mezzasferas, lounge chair, AT, 2025
WunderBar, fence, AT, 2024
K&G, carafe and glass, AT, 2008


Best Friends Chair, sketch | Best Friends Chair © Martin Mostböck

About Martin Mostböck
Architect and designer Martin Mostböck creates furniture, interiors, everyday objects and buildings,
moving fluidly between disciplines. Among his award-winning works are objects seen in the Museum of
Arts and Design in New York, the Design Museum Holon in Tel Aviv and the Museum of Applied Arts in
Vienna. Mostböck demonstrates how material, function and space interact in forms that are both clear
and playful.

An Aedes catalogue will be published.