RaÃÂssa Venables (born 1977) is an American photographer.
Venables was born in 1977 in New Paltz, New York. From 1993 to 1997, she attended the Arts StudentâÂÂs League in Manhattan, concentrating on Anatomy for Life Drawing. In 1999 she received a BFA degree in photography and ceramic sculpture from the Kansas City Art Institute in Kansas City, Missouri. She earned a master's degree in photography at the Milton Avery Graduate School of Arts at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York and a MFA degree in photography in 2002.
Venables' photographs are about planar relationship, passage of time, motion, and perceptual fields, blurring the realm of the real world with the imagined one. She is influenced by Early Renaissance Flemish painters including Jan van Eyck, Rogier van der Weyden, and Robert Campin particularly with their usage of color and lighting. Venables' work is also influenced by the neo-cubistic approach to splitting and dissolving an object or space before reassembling them together. Curators make the comparison of Venablesâ work with thematic perspective found in medieval art, in which objects are arranged in accordance to their spiritual values as opposed to their natural ones.
Matthias Harder, director of the Helmut Newton Foundation in Berlin, wrote about the artistâÂÂs reason for taking this approach, âÂÂVenablesâ real intention is to open up unfamiliar perspectives and to transform real spaces into imaginary ones with realistic traits.âÂÂ
Venables' work is held in the following permanent public collections: