Irene Sheri was born in the city of
Belgorod-Dnestrovsky, Ukraine in 1968. Her mother was Bulgarian,
father French. Her art career started when Irene's older brother
Vasily, then 9, was given as a birthday present a set of paints. And
Irene was told NOT TO TOUCH THEM! Those paints became an object of
desire for her, almost an obsession. She stole them, mixed them,
painted on paper, walls, on her dress and on the bodies of her
friends. She was 4 years old.
At age 9, and thousands of paintings behind
her, Ms. Sheri started her art classes at the Belgorod Art School
for gifted children, and at age 15 graduated both from her junior
high and art school, both as valedictorian.
Rather than going to High School like most
teenagers, Ms. Sheri entered Grecov College of Art in the city of
Odessa, Ukraine. During her first year in the junior college, she
entered and won a citywide juried exhibition "Young Artist of the
year". Since that time and during her two years in the junior
college, the artist entered and won fourteen juried exhibitions, and
at the end of her second year, received a special "excellence in
art" award from the Mayor.
At age seventeen, Ms. Sheri was accepted
into the Serov School of Fine Art in St Petersburg, Russia. All
paintings and sketches that she created during her three years of
study at the college are now used by the faculty as samples of
brilliant academic achievement.
In 1988, a year after she moved to St
Petersburg, Ms. Sheri was enrolled in a summer practice at the
Museum of Wooden Architecture with a group of other students. On the
last day of the practice all of the students went to the museum to
show their work to the public before delivering them to their school
for grading. The museum curator told tourists that they could
purchase any students' work they liked. An hour later, all twelve of
Ms. Sheri’s pieces were gone. Not one piece by the other students
was purchased. Angry and envious, the students told Ms. Sheri that
she was supposed to turn her twelve paintings in to the school, and
the money she earned will certainly be the last professional
earnings she ever made. The students told her she would probably be
expelled from the college for not turning her work in. Two days
later Irene submitted twelve more paintings and was the only student
to receive an "A" for this practice.
In 1990, Ms. Sheri graduated valedictorian
from the Serov College, and was asked to stay at the School of Fine
Art to teach gifted children. She received an apartment for her
outstanding achievement and studio to work in. Two years later, she
into entered one of the most prestigious art schools in the world,
the St Petersburg Academy of Art named after Repin.
In 2000, her graduation artwork was
accepted into the permanent collection of the Museum of Academy of
Art, and a year later, the same painting, "Early snow" (78" x 80")
received the highest honor an artist can receive in Russia, the
"Russian State Award for Outstanding achievement in Art or
Entertainment".
Ms. Sheri’s works are in collections of
such prominent collectors as musician Mstislav Rastropovich, ex-St
Petersburg Mayor Anatoly Sobchak, oil tycoon Leo Vaisberg to name a
few.
In 2002, Ms. Sheri was invited to take part
in all-Russian juried exhibition "Youth of Russia", and again, as it
was each time she entered juried exhibitions, she received first
prize and special commendations. Her artwork is sold and presented
by galleries and dealers in France, Italy, Germany, Belgium, Russia,
Ukraine, Finland, and the US.
Ms. Sheri has a daughter, age 12, who
is already showing early signs of a very talented artist.
Irene Sheri’s publishing company,
Collectors Editions, is a global art publishing company dedicated to
providing the highest quality fine art and services available in the
industry. Founded in 1986, they are also the exclusive global
publisher of Disney Fine Art. Home to Eclipse Workshop, whose master
printers are specialists in fusing traditional print-making with
cutting-edge process, Collectors Editions is painting a better
canvas for the art world…one brush stroke at a time.