Her work is included in the selected private collections; Steven A. Cohen, President Clinton, Dr. Henry Kissinger, and Malcolm Forbes.
She exhibited her works at Fordham University and was chosen to participate in the Learning through Arts Program conducted by the Guggenheim Museum.
Feuerman created life-sized figures within a glass display which were paraded in trucks on the streets of Los Angeles and Manhattan.
[11][12] In 2004, Feuerman's sculpture Sunburn was featured in the traveling group exhibition “An American Odyssey, 1945/1980: Debating Modernism,” curated by Stephen C. Foster.
A hardcover catalog, also titled An American Odyssey, was published in conjunction with the exhibition, written by Stephen C. Foster and John Yau.
[13] In 2007, Abrams Books for Young Readers published “A History of Western Art: From Prehistory to the Twentieth Century” which included Feuerman and her sculpture, Catalina.
Feuerman had a solo show entitled “By the Sea” curated by John Spike, showcasing her monumental sculptures Survival of Serena and Grande Catalina.
[19] In 2009, Feuerman was the featured artist in “46 XX”, at Moscow’s Na Solyanke State Gallery in Red Square, Russia.
[20] In 2010, Feuerman’s sculpture, Monumental Shower, was exhibited in “Intimacy, Bathing in Art” at the Kunstmuseum Ahlen in Germany, accompanied by a Wienand Verlag publication.
[21] In the fall, Feuerman's sixth retrospective, entitled “Earth, Water, Air, Fire”, was at the El Paso Museum of Art.
[13] In commemoration of the tenth anniversary of 9/11, Feuerman’s bronze sphere, New World – AM/PM, was featured in “Afterwards and Forward: A ten year 9/11 reflective art exhibition” at New Jersey City University.
[22] In May 2012, Feuerman unveiled her monumental sculpture Survival of Serena in painted bronze with New York City's Department of Parks and Recreation.
"[25] A 16-foot (4.9 m) bronze diver entitled The Golden Mean at Riverfront Green Park with Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art in Peekskill, New York was unveiled in September 2012.
[35] Starting in 2016, Feuerman’s art is featured in the ongoing traveling group exhibition "Reshaped Reality: 50 Years of Hyperrealistic Sculpture."
[39] Bisol Prosecco hosted a solo exhibition of Feuerman’s sculptures at Venissa, a luxury hotel on the island of Burano, in Venice, Italy.
[41][42] Feuerman designed a central piece for The Health Museum's exhibit "Body as a Work of Art: More Than Skin Deep."
[45] Her work was featured in "PERSONAL STRUCTURES: Identities" at the European Cultural Center in Venice, Italy, organized by the GAA Foundation.
[49] Feuerman's work was also included in a group show at the Palazzo Reale in Milan, Italy called “Corpus Domini: Dal Corpo Glorioso Alle Rovine Dell’Anima” exhibition.
[54] The same year she had a comprehensive solo show called “Crossing the Sea,” the theme being immigration, at Foundation Made in Cloister, in Naples, Italy.