She travelled to London, to study fashion and ended up doing a master's degree in research in artist moving Image at the Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design.
[6] Rezaire's video work Afro Cyber Resistance[7] (2014) denounces the Western-centric nature of the Internet, and the form of white supremacism that is exercised through network control.
It describes the Internet, like the world around it, as "exploitative, discriminatory, classist, patriarchal, racist, homophobic, coercive and manipulative".
[2] In it she showed Sugar Walls Teardown, Hoetep Blessings (both, 2016) and the Inner Fire series (2016–17), which included videos, an installation, and digitally produced self-portraits.
[6]Rezaire's work has been exhibited extensively including at Arebyte Gallery, London, 2019; Athens Bienniale, 2018;[8] MAXXI, Rome; and Artspace, Sydney.
She is also a founding member of SENEB as well as the Johannesburg-based collective NTU,[10] with Bogosi Sekhukhuni and Nolan Oswald Dennis.