[1] Following graduation she returned to her French Polynesia to work as a consulting architect for the government, she then joined the Ministry of the Environment, where she held the positions of Chief of Staff and as Communications Officer until 2004, the beginning of political instability in the territory.
[1] In 2004 she returned to France and focussed on her artistic practice, developing her style and exhibiting work in Europe and the Pacific, in places such as Strasbourg, Paris, Ajaccio and Nouméa.
[2] Her knowledge of the art world and skill in event management led Wallès Kotra and Heremoana Maamaatuaiahutapu, founding fathers of the Tahiti International Documentary Film Festival, to employ her in 2012.
[1] In 2017 Bono was appointed as Director of the Musée de Tahiti et des Îles, with her architectural background considered particularly suitable for carrying out the establishment's major renovation projects.
In September 2019 the Director of the Musée du quai Branly, Emmanuel Kasarhérou, and the Minister for Culture in Polynesia, Heremoana Maamaatuaiahutapu, and Bono signed an agreement to ensure the return to Tahiti of the Maro'ura - a fragment of a chiefly belt made of tapa, that was born by chiefs and is considered a sacred object.