Remarkable women in Melbourne - Advisory Panel recommendation


December 13, 2023

We were overwhelmed by the response from the community. Nominations were received for 185 women, by over 1,000 members of the community.

The women nominated contributed to the development of Melbourne in a range of ways – women’s rights activists, Aboriginal leaders, pioneering women in the workplace and significant arts, culture and sporting achievements.

What we’ve done since

These nominations were reviewed and submitted to an Advisory Panel of eminent Melburnians to consider. Members of the Panel were
  • Professor Clare Wright OAM (Chair) – historian, author, broadcaster, public commentator
  • Antoinette Braybrook AM – First Nations CEO of Djirra, advocate for Aboriginal women’s voice, visibility and self-determination and was 2022 Melburnian of the Year
  • Tasneem Chopra OAM – cross-cultural consultant, speaker, broadcaster, activist
  • Russel Howcroft – businessman, brand advisor, media personality
  • Carol Schwartz AO – business and community leader

The Panel unanimously recommended Vida Goldstein, a suffragist, feminist and politician as their first choice for a woman to be celebrated in statue form. Vida was the driving force behind the right for women to vote and run for politics in Australia – the second nation to do so in 1902. She was the first woman to run for Australian Parliament in 1903.

Learn more about Vida Goldstein and connect with our team to make a pledge.

Next steps

Council have endorsed the Advisory Panel recommendation to commission a statue of Vida Goldstein. In 2024, fundraising for the creation of the statue and an expression of interest process for the artist to create the statue will commence.

The City of Melbourne will commission local artists to develop concepts for all statues produced under this project, as part of its ongoing support for Melbourne’s creative sector. The statue of Vida is expected to be erected by International Women’s Day in 2025, with a location to be determined in the coming months.

The City of Melbourne will continue to investigate the different ways we can celebrate women and continue to redress the significant under-representation of women in public spaces.

Celebrating women in Melbourne’s history