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Amy Simon

Amy Simon’s Io: A Reverse Self-Portrait in Hair, Identity, and Memory

 

Wetterling Gallery presents a suite of works exploring self-representation, surrealism, and the symbolism of hair at Market Art Fair 2025.

Amy Simon’s works are evocative explorations of recollection, identity, and the significance of place. Spanning photography, drawing, sculpture, and documentary film, her practice invites viewers to question their own histories and reflect on themes of memory, belonging, dislocation, and impermanence. Drawing heavily from personal experience, Simon uses images to evoke memories, relive moments, and strengthen connections. Her approach captures the essence of austere, thoughtful, and recurrent moments, creating a universal narrative that unfolds through her daily sessions and drawings.

At Market Art Fair in May, Wetterling Gallery will present Amy Simon’s extended suite of works, Io (Italian for “I”), which explores the conventions of portraiture through self-representation, examining emotions, identity, age, and gender. It is, in essence, a reverse self-portrait. The works draw on elements of Surrealism—not the conventional dreamlike kind but rather an exploration of how an unidentifiable individual is portrayed. Personal themes take center stage, with a particular focus on the sensuality of hair and its symbolic significance, referencing figures like Rapunzel, Medusa, and Samson. This persona is then placed in varied landscapes, both real and imagined, adding a layer of voyeurism.

Amy Simon draws inspiration from Renaissance to modern approaches. Dürer’s 1500 self-portrait, for instance, emphasizes the artist’s identity through a striking focus on hair, a theme he carried forward in later portraits. Magritte employed techniques like obscured markers—apples, fabric, or other elements—to conceal identity, and in his 1958 painting L’ami intime (The Intimate Friend), he portrays a figure in a landscape viewed from behind.

In Io, the opposite of traditional perspective is at play, transforming external observations into internal reflections. Amy Simon’s practice of conceptual contemplation is expressed through an overwhelming visualization that incorporates both the thought-provoking and the artistic capabilities apparent in each work.

In their booth, Wetterling Gallery seeks to channel Simon’s contemplative energy, crafting a space for viewers to engage with the immediacy of her work—a reminder of the present moment, the drawn breath, and the subtle continuity of life.