Michael Ash Smith:
A Sadness of LONGING

March 14–April 4, 2O26

For our first ever photography exhibition, we are very excited to present the work of Michael Ash Smith.

“It wasn’t a difficult sadness. It was more like a sadness of longing. She was alone. With eternity in front of and behind her. The human is alone.”

–Clarice Lispector

In three works of BrazilinClarice Lispector—An Apprenticeship or the Book of Pleasures, Agua Viva, and A Breath of Life—longing is not a problem, it’s a reason to be alive. Lispector doesn’t always give her characters clear answers or resolutions. Instead, they linger inside questions, often uncomfortably. They lie in wait. They sit in the space between what is felt and what is said. She leaves the interpretation up to you, the reader. In An Apprenticeship, longing is a slow learning. Love is approached very carefully, almost fearfully, as something that requires patience and self-awareness. In Agua Viva, longing shifts inward. The narrator reaches for the present moment itself, trying to capture something that can easily disappear. In A Breath of Life, longing appears as separation. A creator and her creation circle each other, suggesting that even within the self there is division. To exist is to feel that split.

This exhibition brings these tensions together. It delves into the spaces Lispector returns to again and again: between self and other, word and silence, presence and absence. Longing becomes both an ache, and awareness. It reveals how deeply we want to connect, to touch, to converse—with another person—while recognizing that complete unity may be impossible. The sadness in this longing is not despair. It should be seen as clarity. It is the understanding that desire arises from distance, from what we cannot have, and that distance shapes who we are. In remaining available and open to that space—rather than trying to close it—we encounter something honest and enduring.