Ellen Land-Weber


Ellen Land-Weber is an American photographer and author.
In 2000 she authored the book To Save a Life: Stories of Jewish Rescue.
Her work is included in the collections of the National Gallery of Canada and the Smithsonian American Art Museum. and numerous permanent collections.
Exhibited widely since the 1970s, she was known for working with alternative technologies such as the first color copy machine, 3M Color in Color,.
She was one of 24 photographers commissioned by the Seagram company to document every county courthouse for the US Bicentennial,  now housed in the U.S. Library of Congress Seagram County Courthouse.
As a member of the photography collective “Water in the West” she has been documenting the Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Refuge since the 1990s, archived at the Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona, Tucson Arizona.
She has been the recipient of numerous Artists Grants from the Polaroid Corporation, working in every format from SX70 to 20x24.
She held leadership positions in the Society for Photographic Education, Treasurer 1979-1981, Secretary 1981-1983.

Works, permanent collections and exhibitions

Works