While there, she co-created The Weight of Memory with Ellen Bromberg, a choreographer/dance filmmaker, and Collapse (suddenly falling down), with the KeckCAVES institute.
At the time of her death, she was working with Bromberg on a piece titled and the snow fell softly on all the living and the dead.
Heavily ironic, pieces such as 10 P.M. Dream or Fierce/Pink/House displayed gender stereotypes only to expose them as insidious traps, and she was firmly committed to feminism as a challenge to oppression and small-mindedness.
The dance was titled Night Stories: The Eva Luna Project First Cycle and was first performed at the Theater Artaud in San Francisco, California.
[5][6] The Della Davidson Prize is an annual award of $1,220 to support "innovative dance and dance/theater artists.