Claire Voisin, the CNRS gold medal winner in 2016, has been awarded two prestigious mathematics prizes
The mathematician Claire Voisin has just been awarded the Crafoord and Frontiers of Knowledge prizes for 2024 which add to the long list of distinctions she has been awarded throughout her career.
Since Claire Voisin joined the CNRS she has won award after award with the CNRS bronze medal in 1988, the silver medal in 2006 and the gold medal in 2016. She was made a member of the French Academy of Sciences in 2010 and was the first female mathematician to be elected to the Collège de France in 2016 where she remained until 2020 as the holder of the chair of Algebraic Geometry... Two more awards have just been added to this frankly non-exhaustive list. Firstly she is the first woman to be awarded the Crafoord Prize
Claire Voisin is a CRNS research professor at the Institut de Mathématiques de Jussieu - Paris rive gauche
However, the French mathematician's highly original approach might also derive from her artistic outlook - she painted until the age of 25 - and her creative nature. As she herself admitted to CNRS Le Journal in 2016, "I wouldn't actually call myself an artist but it's true you need to be creative to be good at mathematics".
This reflects the high esteem in which she holds her discipline, a field of study she goes so far as to describe as a "fact of civilisation". For her "doing mathematics is a source of knowledge, a way of attaining knowledge that is at the root of something fundamental in human activity.”