Sara Wester [Essential]
The Quiet Alchemy of Sara Wester: A Review of Her Oeuvre and Cultural Resonance
If her visual art is the shadow, her writing is the blade. Wester’s 2019 essay collection, “On Holding Things Wrong,” should be required reading for anyone who has ever felt like a fraud in their own skin. Unlike the aestheticized misery of social media poetry, Wester’s prose is clinical but bleeding. She writes about grief as a spatial problem, anxiety as a thermostat malfunction, and love as a “grammatical error we refuse to correct.” sara wester
No review would be honest without critique. Wester’s weakness lies in her occasional hermeticism. The 2022 installation “Please Speak Into the Receiver” —a soundproof glass box filled with disconnected rotary phones—was conceptually tight but emotionally sterile. It felt like an exercise in academic art theory rather than a Wester piece. Furthermore, her written work can sometimes spiral into the recursive. A paragraph about a broken toaster in “On Holding Things Wrong” goes on for three pages, and by the end, you are not sure if she is talking about the appliance, her father, or the fall of the Roman Empire. Usually, she earns this meandering; occasionally, she loses the thread. The Quiet Alchemy of Sara Wester: A Review