Career
She lives and works in Berlin. Her artwork can be found in the Vatican Museum and numerous private collections. The focus of her work revolves around the human being beyond the physical dimension.
Although her work often deals with the human figure, the figure itself is no longer a purely physical body, but rather a metaphysical entity transcending space and time.
Harvard scholar and Professor of Art History at the Australian National University in Canberra, Sasha Grishin, has said of her work, "Light, which permeates all matter, is allowed to irradiate her forms, sometimes dissolving the flesh to leave only patterns and contours. Although the figure retains the centrality in her work, it is no longer a purely physical entity, but increasingly a metaphysical creation."
Vera Sell-Ryazanoff was born July 1, 1951 in Moscow.
She executed illustrations for the magazine Znanie-Sila, for (Italian) Jurij Nolev-Sobolev and poets Viktor Bokov and Yevgeny Yevtushenko. She worked on designs for the opera and theatre and also performed professionally in pantomime at the Pantomime-Theatre Gedrias Gitis.
As a child she developed a passion for sculpture, particularly carving in wood, and, at 14 years of age, was taught by the sculptor Sergei Konenkov.
She was allotted a basement studio in which she could work on her sculptures in exchange for tutoring children with behavioral problems, but three years later both the studio and her work were confiscated and, as a result, Vera Sell-Ryazanoff never returned fully to sculpture. The non-conformist art exhibition was crushed by police and plainclothes security officials, using bulldozers, water canons and dump trucks. Vera was arrested together with Oscar Rabin.
Subsequently her continuing art studies in the Soviet Union became problematic.
She has lived and exhibited in Germany, Canada, Portugal, Australia, France, Italy, Morocco, South of Korea, and Switzerland. While in Australia, she designed the stage set and choreographed four operas.
Her career has spanned over forty solo exhibitions across ten countries.