In addition to her work with VNS Matrix,[8] Francesca da Rimini is known as the creator of online artwork Doll Yoko (1998)[9][10] and hypertext Fleshmeat (1998), which explores the virtuality of women online.[11]
She has created netspaces that feature a particular character or personae and contributes to many projects. She has participated and performed in notable conferences in the 1990s, including TISEA (Sydney 92), SIGGRAPH (Chicago 92), FISEA (Minneapolis 93), ISEA (Helsinki 94), YYZ (Toronto 95), Ars Electronica (Linz 96), and CyberCultures (Sydney 97).[12]
Her works are in collections, including the Victoria and Albert Museum,[13] Richard L. Sandor (USA), Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki, and Griffith Artworks (AUS).[12]
Francesca da Rimini is from Adelaide in Australia.[14]
^"Doll Yoko". _it's coming straight for us. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
^O'Farrell, Mary Ann; Texas A&M University, eds. (1999). Virtual gender: fantasies of subjectivity and embodiment ; [developed in response to issues considered at the 1996 Virtual Gender conference at Texas A&M University]. Ann Arbor, Mich: Univ. of Michigan Press. ISBN978-0-472-06708-4.
^Couey, Anna (2003). "Restructuring Power: Telecommunications Works Produced by Women". In Malloy, Judy (ed.). Women, art, and technology. Leonardo. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. ISBN978-0-262-13424-8.
^Paasonen, Susanna (2005). Figures of fantasy: internet, women & cyberdiscourse. Digital formations. New York: Peter Lang. p. 189. ISBN978-0-8204-7607-0. According to the often-cited narrative, cyberfeminism came to be in Adelaide, Australia, in 1991, as VNS Matrix, a group of four female artists-Josephine Starrs, Francesca di Rimini, Julianne Pierce, and Virginia Barratt