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Matvey Vaisberg Art for Sale and Sold Prices

b. 1958 -

Matvei Vaisberg (born 28 December 1958) is a Ukrainian painter, graphic artist and book designer.

Matvei Vaisberg is the only son of Semion Vaisberg, a chess trainer, and Shelly Harzman, an art historian; a grandson of the poet Matvey Harzman (Motl Harzman) on his mother’s side and Berta J. Vaisberg, a seven-time Ukraine Champion in chess, on his father’s. In 1985, he graduated from Ivan Fiodorov Ukrainian Printing Institute (nowadays Ukrainian Academy of Printing). In 1988, he started to take part in collective exhibitions. In 1990, his first personal exhibition took place in the Historical Museum of Podol (Kiev). More than fifty of both collective and his personal exhibitions have taken place by now, including those in the National Art Museum[1] (Kiev), Kiev National Museum of Russian Art (Kiev), Museum of Contemporary Art in Odessa (Odessa), Cherkasy Museum of Fine Arts (Cherkasy), Berlin Wall Museum (Berlin), Ukrainian Institute of America (New York),[2] Europe House (London),[3] the Sejm of the Republic of Poland (Warsaw), Georgian National museum Georgia.

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About Matvey Vaisberg

b. 1958 -

Alias

Matvei Vaisberg

Biography

Matvei Vaisberg (born 28 December 1958) is a Ukrainian painter, graphic artist and book designer.

Matvei Vaisberg is the only son of Semion Vaisberg, a chess trainer, and Shelly Harzman, an art historian; a grandson of the poet Matvey Harzman (Motl Harzman) on his mother’s side and Berta J. Vaisberg, a seven-time Ukraine Champion in chess, on his father’s. In 1985, he graduated from Ivan Fiodorov Ukrainian Printing Institute (nowadays Ukrainian Academy of Printing). In 1988, he started to take part in collective exhibitions. In 1990, his first personal exhibition took place in the Historical Museum of Podol (Kiev). More than fifty of both collective and his personal exhibitions have taken place by now, including those in the National Art Museum[1] (Kiev), Kiev National Museum of Russian Art (Kiev), Museum of Contemporary Art in Odessa (Odessa), Cherkasy Museum of Fine Arts (Cherkasy), Berlin Wall Museum (Berlin), Ukrainian Institute of America (New York),[2] Europe House (London),[3] the Sejm of the Republic of Poland (Warsaw), Georgian National museum Georgia.