6D Exhibition
Exhibition Runs:
From 7th – 17th January, 2026 | 11am – 5:00pm
Private View: Thursday 27th January, 6pm – 9pm
Artists Talk: 10th January 15:00
Location: ASC Gallery at The Handbag Factory
For this exhibition, ASC has invited the artist collective CASAAC to participate at their 30th anniversary celebrations. The collective is made of 6 international artists who live and work in London.
The group exhibition “6Dimensions” is an exploration of the urban landscape seen from 6 different perspectives to reflect on the energy, rhythm and complexity of the modern life. The group wants to challenge the boundaries of perception, exploring unseen aspect of human experience, nature, the architecture and the concept of beauty.
The feelings associated with being in a specific location and its exploration: curiosity, discovery, fear, tales and memories.
The artists work with a wide variety of materials and techniques ranging from ceramics to installation, sculpture to painting. Their distinct individual visual languages reveal different ways of experiencing the world. However, in this exhibition the artists are not presented separately rather, their works interact with each other throughout the space.
This exhibition is Part 1 of an ongoing exploration of some of the above themes. Please join the collective for Part 2 at 54 The Gallery, Shepherd Market, London W1J 7QX from February 16th till March 1st.
Elements of this exhibition have been made to be inclusive of the visually impaired community.
Participating artists and individual statements
Andrea Vargas
Andrea Vargas is a multidisciplinary artist creating personal work responding to lived encounters.
For the show I have used photo data and traces of everyday London experiences scattered across motherhood, fashion, art history, cinematography, and landscape. These themes don’t sit still; they morph, overlap and dissolve into one another. My pieces respond to this archive not as documentation, but as emotional sediment. I unpick and reweave a visual abstract language that resists fixed meaning, like memory itself.
Each piece becomes an inadvertent diary entry — chasing shadows, playing hide and seek with myself. I search for images that might magically resolve my inner dissonance, but they never do. The answers must come from within the studio. I live and work in London.
@andyvargaas
www.andrea-vargas.com
Ann Simberg-Saunders
Ann aims to elaborate implicit layers of presence in her work. These layers are soaked in memories and they are revealed and concealed across the surface. This process allows the colours to control the forms of the composition.
As a response to the urban place we live in, Ann used her canvas as a part of the factory setting. Her canvases are now part of it and are sold as paintings by the meter.
@annsimberg
www.annsimberg.com
Asaki Kan
“Based in London. There is no limit in my practice. My work varies from sculpture, installation, glass, photography, printmaking, video, to poem, which you experience not only visually, but also with other senses; smell, sound, taste, and feeling. I am interested in transparency and invisibility in both concept and materials. I create ‘Timeless time in Spaceless space’ where memory, dream, illusion, and actual reality encounter and flux.
In this exhibition, I created an experimental site-specific installation in a hidden space where the feeling of heading to an unknown urban city, what will be happening and memory are intertwined with one after another in ‘Timeless time`.”
@asakikan
www.asakikan.weebly.com
Christine Jacoby
Christine studied Book Illustration in Bielefeld/Germany and Fine Art/Drawing with Jim Dine in Salzburg/Austria. After coming to London, she enrolled at Wimbledon School of Art and finished with a degree in Fine Art/Painting under the tutorship of Prunella Clough and Michael Ginsborg. Christine is exhibiting in the UK, Germany and Switzerland.
“My work will speak of our fleeting existence in this universe. The circle of life, lived in the urban environment and beyond, where time seems to flow faster, the constant instability and fluxes of connections, relationships, thoughts, and memories.
My work tends to be quiet with a certain instability. In contrast to fast noisy city life, I retreat into the realms of small importances. Little objects which I find around me are my inspirations. They may be stones which have been around for centuries, skeletons of trodden leaves, or manmade objects by the banks of the river Thames, washed ashore over centuries.Reminders of our ephemeral existence.”
www.christinejacoby.art
Cristina Lorenzet
Cristina sculptural work is inspired by architecture and the landscape. She observes the environment to identify architectural details, fragments, materials and clues on ways of constructing. Her ceramic work is defined by the use of discarded objects to texture clay and to inform her choices of colour and surface decoration.
“In this exhibition I created a wall installation using ceramic “vents” to explore and focus our attention on those architectural elements that are overlooked and to challenge the idea of beauty. Through the juxtaposition of my sculptures, I wanted to create an overall sense of industrial beauty.”
@cristinalorenzet
www.cristinalorenzet.art
Soledad Bustos
Soledad Bustos is a British-Latin American visual artist based in London. With her varied body of work, she is pursuing an exploration in diverse artistic forms like painting, big scale cardboard assemblages, sculpture and public participation-based installations. She also collaborates in the Spanish speaking magazine La Tundra, writing about architecture and football.
“In this exhibition I have explored the concept of Digital ephemerality, the idea of our digital life becoming temporary, and as such, we are regaining a reality where we are free from the concept of the forever. Recording conversations in London streets as stories and tales that linger with a temporary quality. The work will also aim to further perceive the written word through the use of braille and sound.”
@soledadbustos1
www.solebustos.com
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