Lala Eve Rivol was an American commercial artist.
Born in New York City, Rivol later moved to the West Coast; she was a resident of San Francisco in 1938. In that year she was commissioned by the Works Project Administration to create illustrations of rock art sites throughout the western United States. Her paintings and sketches, which depict Chumash and Yokuts petroglyphs and rock paintings, as well as those from other tribes, record the appearance of many sites prior to later vandalism. Many of the sites she visited were in California, but others were in Nevada and Arizona. She died in San Diego.
Thirty works by Rivol are held by the National Gallery of Art, where they form part of the collection of the Index of American Design. A further fifteen are owned by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; the state of Utah owns other pieces. Her sketches are held by the University of California, Berkeley. A book about her work, The rock art lithographs of Lala Eve Rivol by Paul Freeman, was published in 1997.