Elmer Petersen | |
---|---|
Born | Racine, Wisconsin, United States | September 4, 1928
Died | August 5, 2020 La Crosse, Wisconsin, United States | (aged 91)
Education | Leo Steppat, Prof. of Sculpture, University of Wisconsin–Madison |
Alma mater | Dana College; Blair, Nebraska, B.A., University of Wisconsin–Madison, M.S., M.F.A |
Known for | sculpture |
Notable work | World's Largest Buffalo, La Crosse Players, Eagle in La Crosse's Riverside Park (La Crosse) |
Spouse |
Carole Elaine Mortvedt
(m. 1968; died 2001) |
Elected | chairman of the Downtown La Crosse Sculpture Project Committee |
Website | sculpture-in-metal |
Elmer Paul Petersen (September 4, 1928 – August 5, 2020) was an American sculptor who worked in metal. His most prominent artwork is the World's Largest Buffalo in Jamestown, North Dakota. Petersen lived and worked in Galesville, Wisconsin. Much of his art is publicly displayed around La Crosse, Wisconsin, where he led the Downtown La Crosse Sculpture Project Committee.[1] The La Crosse Tribune called Petersen "one of the premier sculptors in the Coulee Region" and "instrumental in getting public sculpture scattered throughout downtown" La Crosse. He has worked significantly with welding, including that of found metal objects, and often sculpted in cast bronze.
While at Dana College, Petersen was drafted in the middle of his education, then returned on the GI Bill to do graduate work in art at the University of Wisconsin. Early in his career, Petersen taught at the University of Jamestown, North Dakota, where he sculpted a large buffalo that is still an important landmark of the city and the namesake of its moniker "Buffalo City".[2] Petersen worked and taught at Texas Lutheran University[3] before returning to Wisconsin in 1978[4] and opening an art studio.
Petersen received thirteen awards out of 23 juried shows. In 2007, he displayed a collection at The Danish Immigrant Museum in Elk Horn, Iowa.[5] Roger D. Roslansky, Chair of Board, HSR Associates of La Crosse, remarked that Petersen was "an invaluable resource and an extremely creative artist," "a sculptor of significant note!"[citation needed]
His death was announced on August 5, 2020, aged 91.[2] Petersen died from Acute Myeloid leukemia and pneumonia[6] at Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center in La Crosse, Wisconsin.[7]