Sara Cwynar (born in Vancouver, 1985) graduated with a bachelor of design honors degree from York University in Toronto in 2010. After working as a freelance graphic designer for the New York Times, she earned an MFA in photography from Yale University in 2016. Her debut solo US museum exhibition, Sara Cwynar: Image Model Muse, opened at the Minneapolis Institute of Art in September 2018, prior to traveling to the Milwaukee Art Museum. Cwynar's Red Film (2018) was included in the 2018 São Paulo Biennial, and she completed a residency at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Maine, in summer 2018. In June 2019, the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut, opened Gilded Age, a solo show of her work. Cwynar has independently published several artist books, including Kitsch Encyclopedia (Blonde Art Books, 2014) and Pictures of Pictures (Printed Matter, 2014). She is represented by Foxy Production, New York; Cooper Cole Gallery, Toronto; and The Approach, London. In January 2021, the largest installation of her work to date will open at the Remai Modern, Saskatoon, Canada. Sheila Heti is a playwright and author of eight books of fiction and nonfiction, including Motherhood (2018) and How Should a Person Be? (2010). In 2018, she was named as part of ""The New Vanguard"" of fiction writers in the twenty-first century by the New York Times. She is a frequent contributor to publications such as Bookforum, London Review of Books, McSweeney's, and the New Yorker. Rose Bouthillier is curator of exhibitions at Remai Modern, Saskatoon, Canada. Legacy Russell is a writer and associate curator of exhibitions at the Studio Museum in Harlem. She is recipient of a 2019 Carl & Marilynn Thoma Art Foundation Arts Writing Award in Digital Art, and a 2020 Robert Rauschenberg Foundation artist residency. Her first book, Glitch Feminism: A Manifesto, was published in 2020.
A visually arresting dive into digital culture and consumerism that cements Cwynar's position as one of photography's most innovative young talents. -Monocle A critical exploration of the use of photography to package and sell beauty. -Vanity Fair Glass Life is more than a monograph. Beyond Cwynar's sharp and detailed expose of institutionalised power, it is the way she conveys the complicated visceral experience of being a subject within these systems that makes the work so radical and remarkable. -British Journal of Photography