Her work was exhibited for the first time at the 1880
Charlottenborg Spring Exhibition where she displayed a
plaster bust. She continued to present work at the exhibition nearly annually for the rest of her life. In 1883, her
statuette En dansende Faun won the Neuhausenske Præmier. Petersen was not initially permitted to enter the
Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, as it only became open to women in 1888. Despite not being a member of the academy, she was permitted to participate in an 1887 competition where her plaster
relief,
Naomi siger Farvel til sine Sønnesønner, won her a gold medal. This, along with several smaller scholarships she had been awarded, allowed her to study in
Paris, where she then resided for a period. While in Paris, she studied under sculptor
Henri Chapu. In 1890, she exhibited the statue
Ismail at the
Salon. It received an honorable mention at the exhibition and later, in 1893, was awarded the Eibeschütz Præmie. Petersen was particularly regarded as a court sculptor. Her first royal commission was a memorial to Tsar
Alexander III of Russia. Petersen's design was granted approval by his widow,
Maria Feodorovna, and permitted by
Christian IX to be erected at
Fredensborg Palace. The bronze bust was placed on a granite pedestal on the palace's grounds. She later executed busts and statues several of members of the
Danish royal family, including
Louise of Sweden,
Frederick VIII, Christian IX, and
George I of Greece. In 1901, she was invited on an eleven-day visit to
Buckingham Palace by
Edward VII and
Alexandra of Denmark. She initially had a studio on
Bredgade in
Copenhagen and then in a villa on Hultmannsvej in
Hellerup. She died on 26 November 1916 in Hellerup and was buried at
Hellerup Cemetery. ==References==