Eliasch works in art photography. Her first black and white photographic show was 'Three Way Mirror', held in London in 1999 at the Cork Street Gallery. Her photography work often consists of glossy fashion-shoot images and black and white nudes. In November 2001 she exhibited a series of photographic contact sheets in a London exhibition, at The Proud Gallery, called 'Peep'. Her portraits of 47 British artists were published (with text by Gemma De Cruz) in
British artists at work in 2003, and were chosen by both
Publishers Weekly and
Art Monthly for their lists of seasonal highlights; the collection was also published in French as
Artistes contemporains: Londres. From this book Eliasch started her own collection through photographing and entertaining many artists including
Tracey Emin and
Polly Morgan in her St Tropez home. Her photographs have appeared in
Made by Indians (2007), a book on Indian contemporary art curated by Fabrice Bouret, and
Made by Brazilians (2014), a book on Brazilian contemporary art curated by Fabrice Bouret. She has also published poetry. In 2008, Chipmunka Publishing published her book of poetry,
Cloak & Dagger Butterfly. Based on the book and a letter she wrote to her father, a theatrical production was produced by Eliasch
As I like it at London's Chelsea Theatre in July 2011; later that year it was transferred to the Macha Theatre in Los Angeles. In 2010 she published
Sins of a Butterfly, a poetry collection. During the Summer of 2011 Eliasch produced the Rebel Show of
James Franco at the
Venice Film Festival with
Liberatum. Eliasch exhibited artworks in July 2011 at the Leadapron Gallery, Los Angeles. Called
Peccadillos, the exhibits were neon sculptures inspired by cartoons of her committing the seven deadly sins with neon artist
Michael Flechtner in Los Angeles, they were drawn by her friend Kay Saatchi. The exhibition later transferred to the Doyle Devere Gallery in Notting Hill Gate, London. The same year, Eliasch worked as a film director and writer, making a "jarringly frank" documentary drama
The Gun, the Cake and the Butterfly, which contained the line: "When a woman confronts her loneliness she is free." It was based on her book and the theatrical production. and the
Bel Air Film Festival, Los Angeles, where she won Best Edit and best documentary made by a woman. In 2014 she was producer of
The Vortex by
Noël Coward at the Matrix Theatre in Los Angeles. She confronted her
doppelganger, who was using her name to gatecrash parties. 2016 Her work appeared in Desire Magazine. Since 2008, Eliasch has also worked as the fashion editor for
Genlux Magazine in Los Angeles. Eliasch subscribes to the
Oxfordian theory of Shakespeare authorship, and has made a film about it, the as of 2025 forthcoming
The Truth Will Out. ==Recognition and awards==