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Past Adoption PracticesPrint Page Print this page

23-December-2013
23-December-2013

Photographs supplied by Arthur Garland

The sculpture titled the "Tree of Hope" commemorates people who have been affected by adoption policies of the past.

In 2012 the Premier, Lara Giddings made an apology to those in the Tasmanian community that had been touched by past practice of forced adoption.

Artist Kristina Nichols was commissioned to create a memorial sculpture called Tree of Hope to act as a powerful symbol of the apology. The steel sculpture is positioned in a quiet corner of the Sequoiadendron Lawn in the Royal Botanical Gardens in Hobart where people can sit and reflect in a beautiful place.

Location

Address:Domain Highway, Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens, Hobart, 7000
State:TAS
Area:AUS
GPS Coordinates:Lat: -42.866615
Long: 147.332596
Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate.
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Details

Monument Type:Monument
Monument Theme:Culture
Sub-Theme:Community
Actual Event Start Date:
Approx. Event Start Date:
Actual Event End Date:
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Designer:
Artist:Kristina Nichols
Monument Manufacturer:
Link:

Dedication

Actual Monument Dedication Date:Thursday 18th October, 2012
Approx. Monument Dedication Date:
Front Inscription

Memorial for Past Adoption Practices

To those people who have held their pain close for so many years, who have lived their lives under a shadow of secrecy,
shame, anger, guilt and deeply held trauma and loss, we offer you our unreserved and sincerest apologies.

Lara Giddings, Premier
18 October 2012

Kristina Nichols
Tree of Hope 2013

Corten steel and polycarbonate

Commissioned by the Tasmanian Government Art Site Scheme

 

Left Side Inscription
Back Inscription
Right Side Inscription
Inscription in Proximity
Source: MA
Monument details supplied by Monument Australia - www.monumentaustralia.org.au