Age, Biography and Wiki
Ivana Franke was born on 21 December, 1973 in Zagreb, SR Croatia, Yugoslavia, is an artist. Discover Ivana Franke's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is She in this year and how She spends money? Also learn how She earned most of networth at the age of 50 years old?
Popular As |
N/A |
Occupation |
Contemporary visual artist |
Age |
50 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Sagittarius |
Born |
21 December 1973 |
Birthday |
21 December |
Birthplace |
Zagreb, SR Croatia, Yugoslavia |
Nationality |
Croatia |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 21 December.
She is a member of famous artist with the age 50 years old group.
Ivana Franke Height, Weight & Measurements
At 50 years old, Ivana Franke height not available right now. We will update Ivana Franke's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Not Available |
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Not Available |
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Not Available |
Dating & Relationship status
She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Parents |
Not Available |
Husband |
Not Available |
Sibling |
Not Available |
Children |
Not Available |
Ivana Franke Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Ivana Franke worth at the age of 50 years old? Ivana Franke’s income source is mostly from being a successful artist. She is from Croatia. We have estimated
Ivana Franke's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
Not Available |
Source of Income |
artist |
Ivana Franke Social Network
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Timeline
Commissioned for the Yokohama Triennale 2020 under Raqs Media Collective's curatorship, Resonance of the Unforeseen was a monumental public art project wrapping the entire front façade of the Yokohama Museum of Art. In a certain distance the building seemed to disappear under the grey material, but as you got closer it seemed to come to life at the breeze, thanks to the subtle moiré effect of the mesh.
Ivana Franke's exhibition Your Country of Two Dimensions is Not Spacious Enough. Limits of Perception Lab in Savvy Contemporary in Berlin, 2020, focused on multidimensionality and included a "laboratory" for possible exploration of the phenomenal experiences of the voluntary participants, employing 5-D altered states of consciousness questionnaire.
In 2019 together with architects Tommi Grönlund / Petteri Nisunen she realised the installation Imminence, shown in the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Rijeka and subsequently in Anhava Gallery in Helsinki in 2020, and public light installation Time Slip, under the Titov Bridge in Rijeka, both as part of Rijeka European Capital of Culture 2020 project
In the iteration of this installation titled Lovers Seeing Darkness. Ubiety Unknown, 2018 in MACBA, the complexity of the slowly appearing figures has been increased by the use of time-based media - programmed choreography of the lights, increasing the vertigo.
In Infinite Threshold, 2017, she installed a glossy foil on the floor of the Hamburger Bahnhof museum in Berlin, reflecting the light and images coming through the windows at the entrance of the space, which originally was the threshold to a train station.
Disorientation Station (White), 2016, commissioned by the Shanghai Biennale is a large circular room with stroboscopic light wall accommodating larger number of people at the same time.
We close our eyes and see a flock of birds, 2013, commissioned by MONA and Sharjah Art Foundation, which accommodates five people at the same time offers a possibility of sharing experience with others, and primes the visitors with its title.
With the similar intention of "moving into a historical location, and uncovering its invisible dimension", Franke's installation Entanglement is a Fragile State, 2012, a geometric structure, a woven linear wall made of semi transparent rope catching light from the windows in the Saint-Nicolas church in Caen in France, reveals the geometry and metaphysical significance of the late Romanesque architecture.
Seeing with Eyes Closed, 2011, the first installation in the series is a curved object with screen of lights, in front of which the visitor sits on the cushion, and engages in an introvert, meditative individual experience. It has been widely shown internationally.
In this context and in conjunction with her art projects, a number of interdisciplinary events took place to further the inquiry into the themes, from different angles by experts from the fields of neuroscience, vision science, psychology, physics, history of science, critical theory and arts, including Seeing with Eyes Closed in Peggy Guggenheim in Venice (2011), at Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin (2012), in Lauba in Zagreb (2012), Towards a Phenomenology of the Unknown in Silent Green presented in Lange Nacht der Wissenschaften in Schering Stiftung Berlin (2017), and Limits of Perception Lab, Summer Solstice Invocations, online event organised by Savvy Contemporary in Berlin in 2020.
Other Franke's installations in complete darkness include Waver, in Circles and Instants of Visibility, 2009, In the Faraway Past and in the Future and From the Faraway Past and From the Future, 2014, Travel Along Unknown, 2020.
Multidisciplinary practice of employing visual/spatial phenomena used in her artworks for quasi-scientific practice of employing visual/spatial phenomena used in her artworks for quasi-scientific experiments - the experiments use scientific methodology in artist's devised setups - investigating perceptual and cognitive processes during exposure to those stimuli has been part of her practice since 2009, such as hallucinatory responses to flickering light in installations Seeing with Eyes Closed, with neuroscientist Ida Momennejad and impossible objects produced by specular highlights - reflections of light on monofilament structures with vision scientist Bilge Sayim.
In her immersive time-based light installations, the materiality of geometric sculptures is often negated and sometimes those constructions are made completely invisible. Instead, those structures serve as a background, a three-dimensional screen for rendering and reflecting light, hosting secondary perceptual "objects", made of light reflections, which as such do not exist, but are inferred in the mind of the observer. Animated Sphere, 2008, a geodesic sphere interwoven with more than four thousands of thin lines of monofilament is illuminated by tiny incandescent bulb which reflects itself on each of those thousands of lines, but does not shed enough light to make the spherical construction visible. Those constellations of reflected light dots, immaterial objects and fleeting phenomena are animated by the observer, move with him/her; they are experienced as ultimately subjective, transient, elusive, fragile and intangible.
In 2007 Ivana Franke represented Croatia at the 9th Venice Biennale with multi-part architecture-related exhibition Latency situated in the Area Scarpa of Pallazo Querini Stampalia. In the central installation Latency (Sala Luzzato) she covered walls and the floor with transparent glossy acryl glass which enabled the daylight, garden and the water to enter the space in the form of reflected unstable images, while the actual Scarpa's architecture remained visible in the background. Remaining three rooms were deprived of daylight and transformed into something evading and fragile – something that ultimately eludes the pragmatism of early modernism.
Although known for her large scale spatial and light installations, Ivana Franke is also recognized for drawings and objects investigating concepts, visualisations and perception of spatial dimensions, and perceptual multistability. In the series of transparent acrylic glass three-dimensional objects Frame of Reference, 2006, she created a perceptual loss of dimension appearance of two-dimensional drawings. The animated drawings in her artist flip book 2-3D, 2004, reproducing Necker cube on transparent foil in a series of four-dimensional sections in five-dimensional space questions relationship of our physical vs. mental space where the perceptual dimensionality flips. In the exhibition Potential Degrees of Freedom, 2014, in Richter Collection, Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, she employs projection of Tesseract - hypercube - silkscreened on translucent paper which opens two dimensionality of the drawing into space. The apparently hypnotic lace-like mandalas of Planetary Nebula, 2019, are drawn from renderings of complex higher dimensional polyhedra, and in Entrance to Six-dimensional Cellar, 2019, a projection of six-dimensional cube printed on the floor creates an imaginary habitable space with an entrance. Further developed into often linear spatial drawings, three-dimensional objects and installations such as Room for Running Ghosts, 2011, a large scale sculpture where tensegrity-based structure points to perception of immateriality, Light Carpet, 2010, relief made of layers of geometric glass sheets embedded into the floor and Traces of Elsewhere, 2018, necker cube based wall relief with positive-negative inversions operating on perceptual multi-stability.
In 2005 she collaborated on the exhibition Izbjegavanje / Avoid, in the Museum of Contemporary Art in Zagreb with artists Silvio Vujicić and Damir Ocko, in 2015 on Srebrenica 1995-2015, an audio-visual event commemorating 20 years from Srebrenica genocide in collaboration with Carl Michael von Hausswolff
Her large scale installations have been featured in many other international biennials, such as kinetic installation Frameworks at 9th Venice Biennale of Architecture, 2004, site-specific installation Liminal Level, 2008 in Manifesta 7 in Bolzano, architectural installation Disorientation Station at 11th Shanghai Biennale in 2016 and Resonance of the Unforeseen in 2020 at 9th Yokohama Triennale, among others.
Ivana Franke co-authored several artworks with other artists and architects, including Frameworks, a kinetic installation first exhibited at the 9th Venice Architecture Biennale in 2004, installed permanently in front of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Zagreb, with architects Petar Mišković, Lea Pelivan and Tomo Plejić.
In her installation Full Empty Space in MoMA PS1 in New York, 2001, she has filled almost an entire room with fishing line and adhesive tape suspended to form structures with three x,y,z axes, the multiple origins of Cartesian lines that start forming space but never define it completely. With those dematerialised, almost invisible structures, she points to the "materiality" of spatial emptiness and light. A visitor is invited to enter the room, but the fragility and invisibility of the structure questions the mere ability to control space that we easily take for granted. In her following installation Prostor, 2003, in Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, the ambience was created by measuring and multiplying a multitude of spatial units drawn in space with threads of transparent fishing line stretched over the three walls of the room, so that the entrance itself was blocked for the visitor and opened only to take over the screen function. However, the paradox is that the network exists, since we have already mentioned it as a tangible obstacle, but it is at no point as such fully visible. Light, which implies the possibility of a visual representation of the world, is not rendered by transparent threads of fishing lines, and almost completely dematerializes white space, making it intangible and invisible.
Her first solo exhibition took place in Nova Gallery in Zagreb in 1997. She received wider recognition in New York MoMA P.S.1 2001 special project program with her ephemeral installation Full Empty Space. In 2007 Franke represented Croatia at the 52nd Venice Biennale with the multi-part site-specific exhibition Latency in Palazzo Querini Stampalia.
Ivana Franke was born in Zagreb, Croatia, at the time it was part of the former Yugoslavia. She graduated at the School of Contemporary Dance and Rhythmics and Graphic Arts at the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb, 1992-1997, under Professor Miroslav Šutej, a member of the New Tendencies, the neo-avant garde movement that influenced her work. In 2001-2002 she participated in the fellowship program of the Center for Contemporary Art Kitakyushu, Japan. In 2004 she was a fellow of the Nordic Institut for Contemporary Art (NIFCA) in Helsinki. In 2009-2010 she was a grantee of the Institut für Raumexperimente and in 2014 she was a resident of ISGM, Gardner Museum in Boston.
Ivana Franke (born 21 December 1973) is a Croatian contemporary visual artist who currently lives and works in Berlin, Germany.