Born into a family of musicians in Novosibirsk, Russia in 1979, Natalia Lomeiko has already established herself internationally as a regular performing artist. She has won prizes in the Menuhin International Violin Competition in 1993 and 1995, the Tibor Varga International Violin Competition in 1997, the Antonio Stradivari International Violin Competition in 1998 and the Tchaikovsky International Violin Competition in 1998. She won the Gisborne Music Competition in 1999, the 2000 Young Musician of the Year Competition (New Zealand), and received the Gold Medal and the First Prize in the Premio Paganini International Violin Competition in the same year. In 2003 Lomeiko won the First Prize in the Michael Hill International Violin Competition.
Lomeiko studied at the Specialist Music School in Novosibirsk with Professor A. Gvozdev, at the Yehudi Menuhin School in England with Lord Menuhin and Professor N. Boyarskaya, at the Royal College of Music and the Royal Academy of Music with Professor Hu Kun. Since her debut with the Novosibirsk Symphony Orchestra at the age of seven, Lomeiko has performed as a soloist with many orchestras, including the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Lord Menuhin, the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, the Tokyo Royal Philharmonic and the Nice Philharmonic. In 2001 she recorded the three violin sonatas of Edvard Greig with pianist Olga Sitkovetsky.
Natalia Lomeiko has performed extensively as a soloist and chamber musician in such prestigious venues in London as the Wigmore Hall, the Purcell Room, the Queen Elizabeth Hall, Buckingham Palace, the Barbican and the Royal Festival Hall. She has toured Great Britain, Italy, France, Germany, Finland, Russia, Poland, USA, Brazil, Puerto Rico, Japan and New Zealand.