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OTOMYS: You grew up in Holland and have experienced such a diversity of cultures by spending time in Borneo, Venezuela, Belgium, Malaysia, Austria and Hong Kong. How has living between different countries with such different cultures helped frame your work?SIMONE BOON: I was born in British Borneo, where my parents lived as expatriates. A kind Chinese amah took care of me, speaking to me in Chinese. My father used to say I could understand her. We returned to the Netherlands when I was still very young, but soon after, we moved again, this time to Venezuela. That’s where my memories began to take shape more consciously: palm trees, vibrant flowers along garden fences, indigenous women in colourful fabrics with babies on their backs, the heat and humidity, and the sounds of crickets in the night.Later, I lived in Belgium, Austria, Malaysia, and Hong Kong. Especially in Asia, the textures of old shop houses, the light falling through wooden screens, the incense in temples, and the rhythm of life on the street had a deep impact on me. I still remember streets filled entirely with fabric sellers, tailors, or ironmongers, each with its own world of colour, form, and sound.
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By the smells, the colours, the unfamiliar landscapes and cultural rhythms, you're drawn into a kind of otherness, a mystery that sparks deep curiosity. These out-of-the-box encounters helped expand my thinking and develop creativity. Many of them stay with me, consciously or unconsciously, and continue to influence my work.
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OTOMYS: Your most recent exhibition with Otomys focuses on human identity, but from a female perspective. How does your work explore the many complexities of female identity and womanhood?SIMONE BOON: The female perspective in my work can also be seen as a feminine perspective. A perspective that doesn’t frame identity as something fixed or absolute, but as something fluid, layered, and continuously evolving. It echoes Kierkegaard’s idea of identity belonging not to the static world of being, but to the temporal world of becoming, as he explored through the figure of Antigone. He portrayed her not simply as a rebel, but as a woman caught in the tension between personal grief and public duty, shaped by inner conflict and existential depth.In my most recent work, I’ve been exploring what I call the illusioned nature of identity. Not in the superficial sense of appearances, but in the deeper way we chase after ideas of ourselves and how we build self-esteem around what we believe ourselves to be or hope to become. These identities are often aspirational, fragile, and shaped by memory, culture, and inner narratives. Sometimes they even bring us into tension with our own biological given.This raises fundamental questions: What part of us is real? How much of who we are is constructed, consciously or unconsciously, and how do we navigate the shifting ground of selfhood? Many people today feel lost in that very question.These states of ambiguity and becoming, the interplay between presence and performance, self and other, intrigue me deeply.Approaching these questions from a feminine viewpoint doesn’t mean defining a category. It’s more about a way of seeing: intuitive, open to contradiction, emotionally attuned, and sensitive to what is fleeting. That space, where meaning slips, identity unfolds rather than arrives, and our stories are built, is where my work in this series resides.
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More from Simone Boon
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A Zurich Encounter Between Simone Boon and Zoe Amor
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Venice Art Biennale | Simone Boon
NewsDutch fine art photographer Simone Boon, is exhibiting in the Venice Biennale 2024 , Palazzo Mora , Room 8, Venice, until November 24, 2024. The European Cultural Centre is delighted... -
Elusive Phenomenology by Simone Boon
Simone Boon is a Dutch artist who finds effortless accord with the fundamentals of art. Her mastery of line, form, space, value and colour is expressed in her most recent... -
In conversation with Simone Boon
My passions.. Art - particularly my experimental approach to photography, the levels of creativity here completely consume me; I love the lengthy and detailed process of planning, styling and shooting... -
Simone Boon receives Honourable Mention in Julia Margaret Cameron Award
Simone Boon has received an honourable mention in the Julia Margaret Cameron Award for Women Photographers. Named after the esteemed British portrait photographer Julia Cameron, the award seeks to promote... -
In Conversation with Simone Boon
In conversationAhead of Simone Boon's exhbition, Dans Van Kleur , we sat down with the artist to learn more about her fascinating conceptualisation of transformation, identity and the female form. OTOMYS:... -
Introducing Simone Boon
April 17, 2019Simone Boon is a Dutch born artist who resides between Amsterdam and Hong Kong. Living between the east and west has brought to her attention the different ways in which... -
Capturing Transformation: Simone Boon's Photography of Becoming and Identity
In conversationOTOMYS : How do you understand the concept of Becoming in relation to your artistic practice? Simone Boon : A central theme in my photographic work is the exploration of...
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Exploring Female Identity Through Contemporary Art: An Interview with Simone Boon
In conversation
In anticipation of Transformations - a forthcoming exhibition by Simone Boon and Zoe Amor - Simone Boon speaks with Otomys about the formative influence of living across cultures, and how her practice explores the evolving nature of female identity. This in conversation offers insight into the layered thinking behind her work and the intuitive, fluid perspectives that shape it.
June 11, 2025
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