Select Presentations/Discussions/Podcasts

Demo Day at the New Museum

Demo Day is NEW INC’s annual showcase previewing the exciting creative projects and enterprises developed during the year. Sponsored by Meta Open Arts, this year’s event features twelve presentations from NEW INC’s Year 8 members, and will explore topics ranging from cursed Internet aesthetics and immersive virtual design to community-oriented creative practice and radical collective economics. Now in its eighth year, Demo Day continues its tradition of introducing cutting-edge thinking to an audience of funders, creative directors, curators, and industry leaders.


Artist Talk at Austin Peay State University

April 2021: In-depth discussion of All the Way to Hell begins at 19 minute mark.


Unraveling the Anthropocene Podcast, Penn State University

Jan. 28, 2021. In Episode 14, “‘All the Way to Hell’: Mineral Rights Between Art and Activism,” Hannah Matangos and Merve Tabur interview visual artist and activist Eliza Evans. Evans introduces her activist-art project “All the Way to Hell,” which aims to draw attention to fossil fuel development on private land in the U.S. by giving away mineral rights to participants. In addition to discussing the purpose and reception of the project, Evans, Hannah, and Merve also have a conversation about the history and legal aspects of mineral rights in Oklahoma.


Thomas Erben Gallery

ecofeminism(s): Zoom Conversations with the artists Betsy Damon, Eliza Evans, and Carla Maldonado and discussant Eleanor Heartney (art writer, contributing editor, Art in America) moderated by curator Monika Fabijanska Wednesday, July 22, 2020 6:30 PM EST. Organized by Thomas Erben Gallery as part of the online programming accompanying the exhibition ecofeminism(s), June 19-July 24, 2020 and Sept. 8-26. ecofeminism(s) explores the legacy of some of the pioneers of ecofeminist art: Helène Aylon, Betsy Damon, Agnes Denes, Bilge Friedlaender, Ana Mendieta, Aviva Rahmani, and Cecilia Vicuña, and how their ideas and strategies are continued, developed or opposed by younger generations – Andrea Bowers, Eliza Evans, Sonya Kelliher-Combs, Carla Maldonado, Mary Mattingly, Jessica Segall, and Hanae Utamura. It also features the ecofeminist works of Lynn Hershman Leeson and Barbara Kruger, who escape these categories.

Social Media

@all.thewayto.hell

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Press

Marlow, Madison. “All the Way to Hell: An Artist's Legal Descent Into the Underworld of Oil and Gas”. Cardozo Arts and Entertainment Law Journal, Upcoming Summer 2022

Boury, Louis. “Who Owns the Earth?”. Hyperallergic, Sept. 8, 2021.

Atkin, Emily. “How to move beyond recycling (part 1)”. Heated, August 20, 2021

McCanne, Michael. “The Art of Obstruction.” Dissent, Summer 2021.

Yaniv, Etty. “All the Way to Hell—In Dialogue with Eliza Evans.” Art Spiel, Nov. 5, 2020.

Wickouski, Sheila. “ecofeminism(s) Exhibition Connects Feminism, Art and Eco-Consciousness”. Ms. Sept. 1, 2020

Weintraub, Linda. “ecofeminism(s) Thomas Erben Gallery / New York”. Flash Art, Aug. 5, 2020. 

Bury, Louis. “What Ecofeminist Artists Learned from Indigenous Cultures”. Art in America, July 20, 2020.

Migan, Darla. “Brown’s a Color, Black is Not”. Brooklyn Rail, Jul-Aug 2020. 

Steinhauer, Jillian. “Reconnecting to a Reopening World”. New York Times, July 17, 2020, Section C, Page 8.

Packard, Cassie. “Ecofeminist Art Takes Root”. Hyperallergic, July 15, 2020.

Mdivani, Nina. “Confronting History through Herstory”. Art Spiel, July 9, 2020.

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