Sherone Grenberg
Born in Israel and relocating to the United States at the age of 24, Sherone Grenberg has spent a lifetime creating with his hands. Long before he discovered metal, he was a builder, a maker, and a dreamer—shaping wood, clay, and found materials into expressions of curiosity and imagination. Growing up in boarding school, creation became more than a pastime; it became a language through which he understood the world.
His journey into sculpture was anything but conventional. With no formal training in metalworking, he entered the medium through instinct, determination, and an unwavering desire to create. Guided by a close friend and marine welder who introduced him to the fundamentals of welding, he began experimenting with cutting, polishing, shaping, and mending metal. Within months, he completed his first sculpture—a pivotal moment that would forever alter the course of his life.
What followed was not simply the development of a craft, but the discovery of a calling.
Working with fire, steel, and bronze, Sherone approaches each sculpture as a conversation between destruction and renewal. He pushes materials to their limits, often working at temperatures and conditions where a piece can be lost in an instant. Yet it is precisely within that uncertainty that his most meaningful discoveries emerge. The marks, textures, and forms that define his work are not carefully manufactured effects; they are the result of courage, intuition, and a willingness to embrace the unknown.
Over time, he developed a series of signature techniques including the Bamboo, Charcoiled, and Drooping methods born not from formal instruction, but from years of experimentation, perseverance, and trust in the creative process. Every surface carries evidence of transformation. Every weld, bend, and scar becomes part of the sculpture’s story.
His work speaks to something profoundly human. Themes of brokenness, healing, resilience, and rebirth appear throughout his collections, inviting viewers to reflect on their own journeys. Collectors are often surprised by the emotional response his sculptures evoke. Some stand quietly in contemplation. Others are moved to tears. Many find themselves seeing fragments of their own lives reflected within the metal. What begins as an encounter with sculpture often becomes an encounter with memory, hope, loss, perseverance, and ultimately, transformation.
For Sherone Grenberg, art is not about perfection. It is about truth. It is about honoring the cracks, scars, and imperfections that shape every life. Through fire and metal, he reveals a powerful reminder: what is broken can be mended, what is wounded can heal, and what has endured hardship can emerge stronger and more beautiful than before.
His sculptures are not merely objects to be collected. They are stories forged in steel, carrying within them the enduring spirit of resilience, faith, and the extraordinary beauty of becoming.