{{short description|German artist}} {{Use dmy dates|date=December 2024}} {{Infobox artist | honorific_prefix = | name = Regina Frank | honorific_suffix = | image = Regina Frank with Sacré Coeur Collider.jpg | image_size = | alt = | caption = Frank standing in front of Sacré Coeur Collider at her exhibition at IWZ International Forest Art Center | native_name = | native_name_lang = | birth_name = | birth_date = {{birth year and age|1965}} | birth_place = Meßkirch, Germany | baptised = | death_date = | death_place = | resting_place = | resting_place_coordinates = | nationality = | education = | alma_mater = {{plainlist| *Freie Universität Berlin *Universität der Künste Berlin }} | known_for = | notable_works = | style = Textile arts | movement = | spouse = | partner = | children = | parents = | father = | mother = | relatives = | family = | awards = | signature = | signature_type = | signature_size = | signature_alt = | elected = | patrons = | memorials = | website = | module = }}

'''Regina Frank''' is a German artist mainly working with text and textile installation and performance. Since 1989, she has been one of the pioneers<ref>Netzkunst "Ein anderer Körper an einem anderen Ort" Tilman Baumgärtel Der Spiegel 18 June 1999</ref> of combining performance art with technology, integrating the Internet and interactive social software installations. Her performances and installations deal with social and political-social issues and link digital media with traditional text transformed into textiles.

== Early life and education == Frank was born in 1965, the daughter of Elisabeth Frank and Franz Josef Frank. She grew up in Meßkirch, Germany, where she kept a home until the death of her mother 2016. Due to the families’ and her home-towns close connection to Martin Heidegger, she devoted much of her youth to art and philosophy, later venturing into Zen Buddhism and Advaita Vedanta. She studied Sinology and Sanskrit, Old Oriental Studies at Freie Universität Berlin<ref name=weseman>Arnd Weseman, Deutschland, 17. Februar S.41 Screen Multimedia, "Datenfaden im Seidenkleid", Arnd Weseman, Deutschland, February 1996, pp. 131–133</ref> until she got accepted at the costume design department and later at the Visual Arts Department at Universität der Künste Berlin.

Here she did her Masters with Katharina Sieverding. As a tutor she taught photography and printing and organized many artist talks between 1990 and 1992, among others with John Cage, Joan Jonas, Marina Abramović, Alfredo Jaar, Antoni Muntadas, Joseph Kosuth, Dara Birnbaum, Christina Kubisch, Hans Haacke, Guerilla Girls, Stephen Willats and Nan Goldin.<ref name=":3"/> She was a founding member of the student organization Interflugs, which represented the students interests to the administration and to professors, and gave access to at the time advanced technological equipment, such as computers, video projectors, editing equipment and video cameras. Together with her fellow students, she advocated equal rights and demanded a higher share of women as female professors<ref>Tip, "Frauen ohne Grenzen", Hanna Lenz, Berlin, Deutschland, September 1992</ref> at the still predominantly male college of arts. Consequently, she was very active in the student strike.

In addition to a number of subtle performances and photographic works dealing with political themes, such as golf war, AIDS,<ref name="ReferenceA">Get Better Soon, Frank Wagner, Aids Project, NGBK (New Society for Fine Arts), Berlin, 1993</ref> she held her studio first in a squat and later above a homeless asylum in Berlin.<ref name=weseman/> She supported various forms of demonstrations in public space for equality, integration of foreigners and acceptance of homosexuals and collected funds for various social purposes. (ShoeshineWoman, Condom and Toy- vending machines in Clubs,<ref name="ReferenceA"/> See you do not look, The Artist Is Present).<ref>Erst Mal was auf's Maul, Katalog, Deutschland, Hochschule der Künste, Berlin, Deutschland, pp. 4, 1992</ref> "The Artist Is Present" was seen in the political-social sense as presence and response-ability of the artist.<ref name=":15" />

For more than a decade she was accompanied by Fernando Pessoa's "The Book of Disquiet", introducing him as her soulmate, many times reserving a space next to her for him.<ref name=observador>Observador: Rita Cipriano on Regina Frank: “Ser artista é ter um lado político” (To be an artist is in itself political) 18 December 2016</ref> Together with a group of friends she was crashing opening parties in painters protection suits and masks made from photocopies of self-portraits of famous painters such as Max Ernst, Pablo Picasso, Vincent van Gogh demonstrating for artists rights.<ref name=observador/><ref name=":15">Avant Art Magazine: Interview Regina Frank (part one): The Artist is Present Within All of Us, June 2013</ref> She lived various times as Frank going out with a mustache and side-burns. She actively danced Tango from 1986 onwards and did many public performances with one female or one male partner, on a private occasion she danced with/for Astor Piazzolla, while he was improvising on his Bandoneon.<ref name=":15" />

Most times when asked for her contact she gave her card which was deprived of all information except "The Artist is Present" or Regina Frank "The Artist is Present" in the early 90s. As this was long before search engines the card was useless to get in touch with her.<ref name=observador/> Though her whole appearance delivered material for performances, it was not until she personally met John Cage in 1990 and organized a workshop for him at the University of Art that she discovered the power and potential of performance to integrate in her own artwork.<ref name=":15" /> She played chess with him and documented the game as a "photographic artpiece". Shortly after she organized another workshop for Marina Abramović and later an exhibition with her classmates during Marina's guest professorship at the University of Art, Berlin. Consequently, she was invited to participate in many museum exhibitions with her performance installations, which kept her collages, drawings and paintings largely unknown.<ref name=":2" />

==Career== Frank has been exhibiting her installations under the title "The Artist is Present" internationally in windows, museums and public spaces. Her first book "The Artist is Present"<ref name=":0">Regina Frank: The Artist is Present (English and German Edition) Hardcover – January 1999 by Cathy Byrd (Author), Richard Vine (Author, Editor) {{ISBN|3000042903}} {{ISBN|978-3000042904}}</ref> was published in 1999. Inspired by the adaptation of Regina Frank's title at Marina Abramović's MOMA exhibition ''The Artist Is Present''<ref>[https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/964 MOMA by Marina Abramović]</ref> after 21 years<ref name=":1">Marina Abramović: Student Body : Workshops, 1979–2003 : Performances, 1993–2003 pp. 204,501,502</ref> in 2010, Frank changed to "The Art is Present"<ref name=":2">The Art Is Present Regina Frank On Paper {{ISBN|978-3-945669-74-7}}</ref> in 2015, introducing the focus on the Art: going deeper into the present and the artist's gift. Later 2017 she advanced to the motto and overall title “The HeArT is Present”.<ref name=":3">The HeArt Is Present Regina Frank – In Space {{ISBN|978-3-945669-74-7}}</ref> Using the dress to address, her work is a creative information processing, data visualization, bridging handiwork and technology, tangible and virtual, creating incentives for communication, discussion and dialogues.

Frank has lectured at M.I.T. Boston, Saint Martin's School of Art London, New York University, the MET, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. She was artist in resident at Wacoal Art Center, in Tokamachi and S-AIR Sapporo in Japan, Kio-A-Thau Residency Taiwan, Guangzhou-Live-4 China, Montalvo Arts Center, USA, Universitat Politècnica de València, Spain and Chienkuo Technology University Taiwan. Her works have been displayed at the New Museum of Contemporary Art<ref name=":4">Cover of Newsletter The New Museum of Contemporary Art, 1992–1994, New York, USA, pp. 9</ref> in New York, Serpentine Gallery<ref name=":5">1998 Loose Threads, "The Glass Bead Game", Serpentine Gallery, London (Catalog)</ref> in London, the Bronx Museum in New York,<ref>Divisions of Labor, curated by Lydia Yee, Katalogue, Bronx Museum of the Arts</ref> Kunsthalle in Berlin, Reina Sofia in Madrid, MOCA<ref name=":6">Divisions of Labor, "Hermes’ Mistress", MOCA (Museum of Contemporary Art), Los Angeles, CA, Catalog</ref> in Los Angeles, Spiral Wacoal Art Center<ref>Join Me curated by Yuko Hasegawa, "GlassBeadGame", Spiral, Wacoal Art Center, Tokio, (with Edward Stein)</ref><ref>Hermes’ Mistress, Solo Performance Spiral Gallery 1996</ref> in Tokyo and at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta,<ref name=":11">{{Cite book|title=Conversations at the Castle : changing audiences and contemporary art|date=1998|publisher=MIT Press|others=Jacob, Mary Jane., Brenson, Michael., Arts Festival of Atlanta (1996 : Atlanta, Ga.)|isbn=978-0262100724|location=Cambridge, Mass.|oclc=38216516}}</ref> ARCO in Madrid, 2001 Expo Hannover<ref name=":7">EXPO 2000, "Performance & Performance", IFU - Pavillon, Hannover (Catalog)</ref> and 2003 San Diego Museum of Art.<ref name=":8">San Diego Museum of Art "Tracking and Tracing: Contemporary New Acquisitions” San Diego, USA, Catalog</ref> iLAND launched in 2011 and in 2013 during the Venice Biennale (Infr’action)<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.infraction.info/en/archives/infraction-9/artistes/regina-frank-allemagne.html|title=Regina FRANK, Germany .:. infraction.info|website=www.infraction.info|access-date=2018-03-28}}</ref> and 2017 at London Artfair. Since 2013 iLAND was shown in the US, Portugal, Finland, France, Holland and China and 2018 at the MAAT (Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology) in Lisbon.

Frank's work has been featured in many publications including: Sculpture Magazine,<ref name=":9">Sculpture Magazine “Art and Life, Sculpture and Process”, Cathy Byrd USA, Vol.20, No.2, March, pp.16–23, 2001</ref> Studio Art Magazine,<ref>Studio Art Magazine, Israel, Nr. 79, August, pp. 53–57, 1997</ref><ref name=":12">Studio Art Magazine, “Let the Artist Live at Exit Art”, Tami Katz-Freiman, Israel, No. 59, December, pp. 61–62, 1994</ref> Asahi Evening News,<ref>Asahi Evening News, “Art Is Who You Are”, Suzannah Tartan, Japan, 9. Dezember 1996</ref> Studio Voice,<ref>Studio Voice, “Regina Frank – Hermes’ Mistress”, Interview with Yuko Hasegawa, Japan, Juli, S. 62–67</ref> Screen Multimedia,<ref>Screen Multimedia, “Datenfaden im Seidenkleid”, Arnd Weseman, Germany, February, pp. 131–133, 1996</ref> Parade Magazine,<ref>Parade Magazine, Jane Ciabattari, “Intelligence Report”, USA, 7 November 1993</ref> Harper's,<ref>Harper’s, Sean McLaughlin, USA, January 1994</ref> The New York Times,<ref>New York Times, “Spoken Word”, Sasskia Sassen, USA, 26. September 1993</ref> in Time Out<ref>Time Out, Sarah Kent, London, 14.-21.December 1994</ref> Rethinking Marxism,<ref>Rethinking Marxism, “Pearls before Gods”, Laura Trippi, April, pp. 81–84 1994</ref> Vogue,<ref>Vogue, “Untragbar”, Claudia Steinberg, Deutschland, February 1995</ref> Cosmopolitan,<ref name="Cosmopolitan, pp. 134-135">Cosmopolitan, "Berlin + Kunst", Thea Herold, Germany, April, pp. 134–135</ref> Frankfurter Rundschau,<ref>Frankfurter Rundschau, “Wenn der Fallschirm im Garten zum Kleid wird“, 08.09.2003</ref><ref>Frankfurter Rundschau, “Nomadin auf elektronischen Traumpfaden”, Arnd Weseman, Deutschland, 17. February 1996, pp.41</ref> FAZ,<ref>FAZ (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung), “Eine Kunstreise durch liebliches Wohngebiet“, September 8, 2003</ref><ref>FAZ, Jens Jessen, Deutschland, December 7, 1994</ref><ref>FAZ, “Adventgedanken” Jens Jessen, Deutschland, 2. May 1994</ref><ref>FAZ, Kunstbiennale "Vogelfrei" Jäger und Sammler im alten Park Die Kunstbiennale „Vogelfrei“, Rainer Hein, Darmstadt 19.06.2011</ref> Japan Times,<ref>Japan Times, “Knotting Threads of Friendship”, Miki Miyatake, Japan, 29 June 1996</ref> Contemporary Art,<ref>Contemporary Art,“Artful Fashion”, Sarah Bayliss, USA, Issue 13, pp. 72–73, 1997</ref> Art Papers,<ref>Art Papers @ 20, “Art at the Centennial Olympic Games”, Cathy Bird, Issue 6, Nov./Dec., pp. 26–27, 1996</ref> Art Examiner,<ref>New Art Examiner, “Unruly Publics”, M. Sherbeck, USA, Dezember/Januar, pp. 17–18, 1996</ref> The Atlanta Journal-Constitution<ref>The Atlanta Journal Constitution, “Technology as a Canvas”, Catherine Fox, USA, 26. July 1996, pp. 53</ref><ref>The Atlanta Journal Constitution, “Castle Will Spark Conversations with Art over Your Head”, Jerry Cullum, USA, 12.July 1996</ref> Art Press,<ref>Art Press, Dorothea Malpass, France, June 1994</ref><ref>Art Press, Robert Morgan, USA, January 1994</ref> Being on Line,<ref name=":13">Being On Line, Lusitania Press, Regina Frank, {{ISBN|1-882791-04-5}}, USA, Cover, Text: pp. 150–152, pp.153–156, 1996</ref> Arte y Parte,<ref name=":14">Arte y Parte, “De Arte y Moda”, Regina Frank, Spain, Nr.14, April/May, pp. 18–23</ref> Public Art and Ecology<ref>Public Art and Ecology, Ute Ritschel, December 2011, pp.166–176</ref> On the Issues Magazine<ref>Linda Stein, the Art Editor of on the Issues Magazine presents Regina Frank</ref> and Allgemeine Zeitung.<ref>Internationales Waldkunstzentrum zeigt Retrospektive der Performerin Regina Frank</ref>

===Works=== '''L’Adieu Pearls before Gods (1993)'''<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":4" /> dealt with human rights issues and global labor division. With a 28-day performance in the window of the New Museum of Contemporary Art she drew attention to the global underpayment in the textile industry. While she embroidered pearls on a white silk dress, she received a different hourly wage every day, calculated by the average wage of 28 different countries, paid by Westminster Bank. On her first day she earned $17.10 an hour for Norway, decreasing to 20 cents (the average cost for a worker in Indonesia in 1992 according to apparel data). Her decreasing wages were published in the Dow Jones stock index. She bought flowers and bread, symbolically as food for body and soul, and to reveal the purchasing power of her wages. The installation, which was produced during this performance, was sold to Robert J. Shiffler's collection through auction at Christies. A part of the proceeds went to a foundation that worked for the rights of illegally entrenched textile workers, who were held, like slaves, in small factories in New York 's sweatshops around the corner of the museum. The work was extensively discussed. In addition to some TV portraits, articles in Parade Magazine, Harper's Bazaar, Cosmopolitan and Vogue appeared. thumb|Regina Frank "The Artist is Present" travelled as Hermes Mistress to Europe, USA and Asia from 1994 to 2001. Spiral Wacoal Art Center Tokyo '''Hermes' Mistress"'''<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name=":6" /> From 1993 onwards, she dealt with the Internet as a steadily growing source of information. "Hermes' Mistress" investigated the meaning of this flood of information, by sitting 777 hours in different museums, “harvesting" information that touched her from the Internet and spelling it out stitching letter for letter on an island-like red dress. (26,226 letter beads). Hermes Mistress was shown first at Exit Art, New York, and after travelled to Kunsthalle, Berlin / Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Los Angeles / Bronx Museum of the Arts, New York / Spiral Wacoal Art Center Tokyo, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid / Kampnagel, Hamburg / UNESCO, Paris / Fondapol, Paris / Shih Chien University (Taiwan).

In the '''GlassBeadGame''', 1996<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name=":0" />(named after Hermann Hesse's novel), during the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, she dealt with art as a source of international exchange and a contribution to peace. (See MIT-Press "Conversations at the Castle"). For this interactive performance installation, she wove a "magic mantle" (kimono) from favorite books and quotes. Visitors were able to contribute to the installation via the Internet: with virtual pearls from texts and poems, generated by a computer program. Frank in her own video: “There was a space where there was no winner and no loser, an Olympic game for everyone – a possibility to be present, regardless of space and time.” With the Glass Bead Game, Frank succeeded in gaining acceptance in the Japanese market, which later extended to Taiwan and China. She worked with Pixelpark creating software and later with Media Service Group, with whom she worked as well on Inner Networks in 2000, creating a large calendar and a series of prints.

Between 1995 and 1999 Regina Frank worked with the Internet and developed works like '''A-dress'''.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name=":10">{{Cite book|title=Negotiating domesticity : spatial productions of gender in modern architecture|date=2005|publisher=Routledge|others=Heynen, Hilde., Baydar, Gulsum.|isbn=9780415341394|location=London|oclc=62319809}}</ref> Similar to the later "blogging", she wrote a letter to her own dress every day for 97 days, acting as an address. The letter was available daily on a website, but at the exhibition at the Winnipeg Art Gallery in Canada, the texts were printed on white sheets, and filled the inside of her dress, linked to withered and ink-dyed leaves on the outer surface. The work was used as a cover for the book "Negotiating Domesticity" by Hilde Heynen and Gülsum Baydar,<ref name=":10" /> published by Routledge.

In 1999, she developed a '''Mushroom Dress'''<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":3" /> for the Philippseich Castle Park literally growing a dress from mushrooms which she consumed with visitors. During the Expo 2000 in Hanover, she sat under the title '''Performance&Performance'''<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":7" /><ref name=":9" /> in the shop window of the International Women's University pavilion and was literally linked to the stock market by a real-time connection. For seven hours, she sat still and with very slow movements she reflected the rising and falling of stocks, thematizing the manipulative involvement of the stock-market with human everyday life. In 2001 for the Intermediale Mainz she created Food for Soul feeding people with quotes and fresh fruit and vegetables in a white enormous dress celebrating abundance.

In 2002 '''What is Black? What is White?''',<ref name=":3" /> Frank built a camera into an ink brush, thus showing the process of writing of the answers from above and from the perspective of the camera, and eliminating the perspective of the artist. In the white installation space the form of the dress gradually became visible as the black text spiraled outward.

In 2003 '''Whiteness in Decay'''<ref>Union-Tribune „Reaching into past for inspiration", Robert L. Pincus, San Diego, USA, 29.05</ref><ref name=":8" /><ref name=":3" /> at the San Diego Museum of Art, she asked: What feeds your soul? More than 3000 responses were projected on a canvas behind her plaster cast. She was covered in plaster for this performance and slowly freed herself from the hard white shell, peeling the fruits and vegetables from her crust and share them with the audience. A process from a white fragile doll into a colorful human painting and being. She taught masterclasses for Bauhaus Dessau in 2003, directed a group performance at Bauhaus Dessau with young performers and curated an exhibition in 2004 in an abandoned shopping center right next to Bauhaus.

In 2004 she started '''Sharing Silence'''<ref name=":3" /><ref>Museum of Modern Art, “AIR – Stepping across Borders”, Sapporo, Japan</ref> with the Museum of Modern Art and SAIR residency in Sapporo which she continued in Taiwan, Germany, France, UK and Portugal until 2011 for seven years, spending 7 minutes to 7 hours in silence with complete strangers.

From 2005 to 2007 she developed '''Dreamweaving'''<ref>Dreamweaving, Regina Frank, 14 Pages Calendar, Including Software CD-ROM, Druckvogt Germany</ref> a game for children and adults encoding text into images, turning poetry into pictures and again text into textile. The game was available in English, German and Portuguese, due to a grant by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation.

In 2005 she worked on the social software and performance project '''Constellations'''<ref name=":3" /> for FEA (Federal Environmental Agency, Germany) where she photographed more than 400 employees and up to three chosen items per person, connecting and introducing them to each other.

In 2007, Frank turned 67 years old and committed to go on a seven-year sabbatical from established art institutions.<ref>Video lecture for PRAXIS Center for Aesthetic Studies Brainard Carey</ref> She continued working on Sharing Silence as an ongoing performance and developed several unpublished performances investigating the ready made of Marcel Duchamp within. It was supposed to lead into the culminating phase of "The Artist is Present," a 28-year project, conceived in 1989, but when Marina Abramović used her title at MOMA, she realized that the artist could be confused with the body mind organism and changed. "The HeArt is Present" was dropping the "ist"<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.theartispresent.com/|title=The Art is Present|last=Frank|first=Regina}}</ref> of the Artist in favor of a greater self and a less personal identity and a reminder for the inspiring entity within all of us. It is also during this time that she returns to her painting and drawing, culminating in an exhibition at her home town at Meßkirch Castle entitled "The Art is Present"<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":3" /> in 2017 after her seven-year-sabbatical.

'''iLAND'''<ref name=":3" /> 2011–2018, is a series of performances in public space, (streets, beaches, landings etc.), dealing with environmental issues. iLAND shows the imbalanced zones of our planet in a textile collage together with intact landscapes, which have not yet been haunted by disasters in the last 500 years. Aerial photographs and topographical images were changed, painted, printed and combined in photomontages. The dress and the sculpture became an island of discussion, a vehicle for communication and a field for common reflections. In her performance, she moves so slowly that the movement can only be perceived in time-lapse, almost like the growth of a plant, as we see the effect of our actions often only after when we fast forward.

Regina Frank's work is inspired by Sufism (Rumi), Zen meditation, and Advaita Vedanta. Poets such as Fernando Pessoa and various Philosophers such as Ludwig Wittgenstein, Martin Heidegger. Samuel Beckett could be seen as an important influence, as well as Johannes Vermeer, Henri Michaux, Joseph Beuys, as well as the German Fluxus movement.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":3" /><ref name=":11" /><ref name=":12" /><ref name=":13" /><ref name=":14" />

== Membership == {{ill|Independent Performance Group|de|vertical-align=sup}}

== Publications == * ''Regina Frank. The Artist Is Present. Performances 1992–1999, Berlin, 1999, {{ISBN|3-00-004290-3}}'' * ''Regina Frank. The Art Is Present – On Paper, Freier Berliner Verlag, Berlin, 2015, {{ISBN|978-3-945669-74-7}}'' * ''Regina Frank. The HeArt Is Present Regina Frank – In Space, Freier Berliner Verlag, Berlin, 2015, {{ISBN|978-3-945669-74-7}}'' * Conversations at The Castle: Changing Audiences and Contemporary Art, by Mary Jane Jacob and Michael Brenson, Homi K. Bhabha, MIT Press, USA, 1998, pp.&nbsp;20–25, {{ISBN|0-262-10072-X}} * Divisions of Labor, Lydia Yee, catalogue, Bronx Museum of the Arts / MOCA, Los Angeles, USA, 1995

== Performances, Installations and Exhibitions (selection) == * [http://www.messkirch.de/de/Bürger/Aktuelles/Veranstaltungen/Veranstaltung?view=publish&item=eventDate&id=1304 The Art Is Present – Regina Frank, Meßkirch, 2015] * [https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/kb/article/download/10793/4648 Das Netz, der Stoff und das Dazwischen, 2013] * [https://www.faz.net/aktuell/rhein-main/hessen/kunstbiennale-vogelfrei-jaeger-und-sammler-im-alten-park-1652850.html Kunstbiennale „Vogelfrei“, Jagdschloss Kranichstein, FAZ, 2011] * [http://www.suedkurier.de/region/linzgau-zollern-alb/messkirch/Aesthetik-mit-Energiekonzept-vereint;art372566,342707 Ästhetik mit Energiekonzept vereint, 2008] * [https://www.umweltbundesamt.de/sites/default/files/medien/publikation/long/4348.pdf Konstellationen, Umweltbundesamt, PDF, 2005] * [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/08935699408658113?journalCode=rrmx20 L'Adieu Pearls before Gods, Rethinking Marxism ] * [https://archive.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/229 L'Adieu Pearls before Gods, New Museum Archive]

==References== {{reflist}}

== External links == * [http://www.theartispresent.com/ Website der Künstlerin, The Art Is Present] * [http://www.hna.de/kultur/documenta/lori-waxmans-kunstkritik-regina-frank-2382196.html Lori Waxmans Kunstkritik: Regina Frank] * [http://www.spiegel.de/netzwelt/web/netzkunst-ein-anderer-koerper-an-einem-anderen-ort-a-27713.html Netzkunst: „Ein anderer Körper an einem anderen Ort“, Spiegel, 1999] * [http://www.suedkurier.de/region/linzgau-zollern-alb/kreis-sigmaringen/Regina-Frank;art372548,3182796 Regina Frank], Südkurier, 2008 * [http://museumofnonvisibleart.com/interviews/regina-frank/ Yale University] * [http://www.avantartmagazin.com/regina-frank-part-one-english/ Avant Art, Part I] * [http://www.avantartmagazin.com/regina-frank-part-two-english/ Avant Art, Part II] * [http://www.sculpture.org/documents/scmag01/march01/frank/frank.shtml Sculpture Magazine] * [http://www.ontheissuesmagazine.com/2010summer/2010summer_art.php On The Issues] * [http://montalvoarts.org/participants/regina_frank/ Montalvo Silicon Valley] * [http://www.infraction.info/en/archives/infraction-9/artistes/regina-frank-allemagne.html Infr'action 9] * [http://www.thing.net/lusitania/Online/current.html Lusitania Titel] * [https://www.amazon.de/Negotiating-Domesticity-Spatial-Productions-Architecture/dp/0415341396 Rutledge Titel] * [http://arteyparte.com/ Arte y Parte, „De Arte y Moda“, Regina Frank, Spanien, Nr.14, April/Mai 1998, S. 18–23]

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Frank, Regina}} Category:1965 births Category:Berlin University of the Arts alumni Category:Free University of Berlin alumni Category:German performance artists Category:German contemporary artists Category:German women contemporary artists Category:Living people