[4] Made in 2004, it is a concave circular piece dug out of the land itself, inspired by Anglo-Saxon barrow fields and prehistoric earthworks found in the local area in Kent.
Her idea was to subvert the destructive and aggressive power of the aircraft into a living growing piece – it consists of a clearing in the monoculture of coppiced sweet chestnut trees cut into the negative shape of the American bomber.
[5] From 2014 Leventon was commissioned by the Woodland Trust to make a permanent Earthwork for the Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Woods situated in Normanton le Heath, Leicestershire, UK.
[11] Leventon's work was constructed from layers of hand cut plywood taking the conical beehive forms as its starting point, lit from the inside.
[11] In 2000, she was commissioned to make a piece for the National Maritime Museum responding to the history of HMS Implacable, a Ship of the Line, of which only the salvaged stern and figurehead remained.