Mabel Harris Conkling's work was included in the
1900 Paris Exposition, the
1904 St. Louis World's Fair, the 1908 Baltimore Sculpture Exhibition, at the
National Academy of Design,
Harrisburg City Hall, and many other shows. She specialized in public sculptures, including fountains, relief panels, trophies, and cemetery urns. She also made portrait busts in bronze, and bas relief medallions. A bas relief bronze portrait of
Ethel Barrymore, by Mabel Conkling, is in the collection of the
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution. A bronze statue by Conkling was presented to theatre professional
Samuel Roxy Rothafel in 1931, and a bronze loving cup by Conkling was presented to musician
Walter Damrosch in 1933, both presentations by the New York Federation of Women's Clubs. Conkling was president of the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors from 1926 to 1928. She was still on the board when the organization changed its name to the
National Association of Women Artists in 1941. Conkling was also president of the Maine Women's Club of New York. ==Personal life==