Exhibited widely since the 1970s, she was known for working with alternative technologies such as the first color copy machine, 3M Color in Color, (solo exhibition at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, 1978).[5]
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.[6]
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.[7]
She has been the recipient of numerous Artists Grants from the Polaroid Corporation, working in every format from SX70 to 20x24.[citation needed]
She held leadership positions in the Society for Photographic Education, Treasurer 1979–1981, Secretary 1981–1983.[8]
Morris Graves Museum of Art, Eureka California, 2001
Group exhibitions
SF Camerawork gallery Archives 1977 "The Instant Image" Ellen Land-Weber, Ted Orland and Barbara Astman [19]
FotoFest 2004, Houston Texas March 12-April 12, 2004 [20]
Humboldt State University First Street Gallery Village of Old Believer's, Siberia, 2008 [21]
Humboldt State University Third Street Gallery, "A Moment in Time" October 2013 [22]
Awards
National Endowment for the Arts Individual Artist Grants: 1975, 1979, 1982
Fulbright Senior Fellowship 1993
Humboldt State University Scholar of the Year 2005
Press
The Passionate Collector, Art Forum, December 1980 [23]
Ellen Land-Weber in "Proof: Los Angeles Art and the Photograph 1960–1980", text by Charles Desmarais, published by Fellows of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, 1992 [24]
"Images of Altruism" by Bob Doran, North Coast Journal Weekly, October 5, 2000 [25]
“Visions: An afternoon with Ellen Land-Weber” , by Bob Doran, North Coast Journal Weekly, February 3, 2005 [26]
Scotia Past: A trip back in time to a company town at the crossroads, Ellen Land-Weber, North Coast Journal Weekly, March 22, 2007 [27]
"Altruistic Personality? How Rescue in the Holocaust Was Not Entirely Selfless," [28]
Melanie Parker, on Ellen Land-Weber’s “To Save A Life,” March 14, 2008
"Facing Others: Portraits from New Guinea" at F Street Gallery, Times Standard, Eureka California May 31, 2018 [29]
"Scotia Past" illustrated cover story by Ellen Land-Weber, about the company town Scotia, published in North Coast Journal of Politics, People and Art: March 22–28, 2007 vol. 18, No.13 [27]