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RST Apology to Tasmanian Aboriginal people 2021.

RST Medal Winners 2024

31 May 2025
News

Summary

Listed here are the 2024 medal winners for the Peter Smith Medal and the Louisa Anne Meredith Medal. A medals ceremony will be held at Government House on 18th June, 2025 where the medal winners will be presented with their medals by Her Excellency the Honourable Barbara Baker AC. This ceremony is open to everyone. More information is available here.

Peter Smith Medal

Peter-Smith-medal
Peter Smith medal

The Peter Smith Medal is awarded biennially to an outstanding early career researcher in any field. The awardee receives a medal and is invited to deliver the “Peter Smith Lecture” to the Society. The inaugural Peter Smith Medal was awarded in 2018.

Peter Warnock Smith (1924-2017) was an inorganic chemist, who at the University of Tasmania introduced new research and teaching topics, such as analytical chemistry, industrial and applied chemistry, and chemistry for engineers. Smith was a long-term contributor to the RST and was President in 2006.

This year the recipient of the Peter Smith Medal is Dr Edward Doddridge (University of Tasmania) for his outstanding contribution to the field of physical oceanography. Through his research, he works to improve our understanding of ocean currents and the ocean’s role in our climate.

Dr Edward Doddridge is a Physical Oceanographer working at the ocean-sea ice interface with the Australian Antarctic Program Partnership. Dr Doddridge’s research uses theory, numerical models, and observations to improve our understanding of the fundamental dynamics of the polar ocean and its response to climate change. His work has revealed new details about the influence of sea ice on ocean currents, and of ocean warming on sea ice loss.

Dr Edward Doddridge
Dr Edward Doddridge

Louisa Anne Meredith Medal

Louisa Anne Meredith Medal
Louisa Anne Meredith Medal

The Louisa Anne Meredith Medal is awarded every four years to a person who excels in the field of arts or humanities or both, with outstanding contributions evidenced by creative outputs. The awardee receives a medal and is invited to deliver the “Louisa Anne Meredith Lecture” to the Society. The Louisa Anne Meredith medal was established by the RST in 2023. This year is the inaugural award of this medal.

Louisa Anne Meredith (1812-1895) (née Twamley) came to Tasmania in 1840 and was a remarkable woman, a prolific artist, writer and social commentator. She was the first woman to be granted Honorary membership of The Royal Society of Tasmania in 1881. The RST has a large number of her sketches and watercolours in its Art Collection, as well as a number of her books in its Library.  Meredith contributed a great deal to the work of The Royal Society of Tasmania. Over several decades, she sent interesting specimens to the Royal Society Museum and presented beautiful and accurate watercolours of many specimens to the RST. These artworks were much admired at Society meetings as being ‘beautifully executed’. The Royal Society of Tasmania also purchased a number of her illustrations at the time.

The RST Honours Committee decided that it was inappropriate to attempt to separate two outstanding nominations for the medal. The Louisa Anne Meredith medals for 2024 are awarded to Cassandra Pybus and Fiona Hall.

Professor Pybus is well regarded internationally as an historian of colonial society in Australia, S.E. Asia, the Caribbean and North America. As a non-fiction writer, she draws on exhaustive historical research to create compelling alternative narratives about the past.

Cassandra Pybus is a distinguished historian, author of thirteen books and Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. She has been the recipient of several Australia Council Fellowships and a Federation of Australia Centenary Medal for outstanding contribution to literature. Between 2000 and 2013 she was Australian Research Council Professorial Fellow at both the University of Tasmania and the University of Sydney and has been Fulbright Professor at Georgetown University in Washington DC, Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of Texas, and Leverhulme Visiting Professor at King’s College, London. Her recent book A Very Secret Trade interrogates the trade in First People’s skeletal remains, which is the last of a trilogy concerned with the destruction of the First People of Tasmania, beginning with Community of Thieves, published in 1991, followed by Truganini in 2020 which won the National Biography Award.

Professor Cassandra Pybus

Fiona Hall AO is an internationally respected visual artist, one of Australia’s most highly regarded and recognised artists. She works across a range of media including painting, photography, sculpture and installation.

Fiona Hall is an artistic photographer and sculptor. Hall represented Australia in the 56th International Art Exhibition at the Venice Biennale in 2015. She is known as “one of Australia’s most consistently innovative contemporary artists”. Many of her works explore the “intersection of environment, politics and exploitation”. Fiona Hall is best known for extraordinary works that transform quotidian materials into vital organic forms with both historical and contemporary resonances. Hall works across a broad range of mediums including photography, painting, sculpture, moving image and installation, often employing forms of museological display. Hall’s sculptures are characterized by their intricate construction and thematic resonance with issues of environmentalism, globalisation, war and conflict. In 2013, Hall was recognised “for distinguished service to the visual arts as a painter, sculptor and photographer, and to art education” with the award of Officer (AO) in the general division of the Order of Australia.

Fiona-Hall
Fiona-Hall

Acknowledgement of Country

The Royal Society of Tasmania acknowledges, with deep respect, the traditional owners of this land, and the ongoing custodianship of the Aboriginal people of Tasmania. The Society pays respect to Elders past, present and emerging. We acknowledge that Tasmanian Aboriginal Peoples have survived severe and unjust impacts resulting from invasion and dispossession of their Country. As an institution dedicated to the advancement of knowledge, the Royal Society of Tasmania recognises Aboriginal cultural knowledge and practices and seeks to respect and honour these traditions and the deep understanding they represent.

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On 15 February 2021, the Royal Society of Tasmania offered a formal Apology to the Tasmanian Aboriginal people.