About Ever Pallas
Ever has been a graphic designer, art director, and storyteller on cultural landscapes for nearly two decades. He studied at Yestermorrow Design/Build school in Warren, VT before completing a bachelors in Sustainable Community Development at Prescott College. As a film editor he has worked for Kahlil Joseph, Arthur Jafa, and Kinfolk Foundation. They have collaborated with Gia Hamilton and Pam Broom to investigate and ameliorate food deserts while connecting and documenting Black farming traditions in New Orleans. His work has been exhibited at the Contemporary Arts Center New Orleans, Harvard's Carpenter Center, the Corcoran Museum and is retained by The National Gallery. Their affection for how artistic ecologies adapt or invent economic and technological landscapes has led to two separate masters degrees; one from the Corcoran College of Art and Design and the other from the Southern California Institute for Architecture.
Ever Pallas is an artist/designer with a background in cooperatives, architectural theory, and handmade ephemera. His projects focus on interconnectedness, social justice, and the ecological history of cities. Through sculpture, interactions, printed and digital media they are a passive inventor of microenvironments for empathetic integrity. Ever’s site specificity involves a process receiving and channeling the intersectional complexity of our human condition into visceral objects and convivial happenings. He is also an editor of collage style films in digital and celluloid formats.