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The year 2003 in art involves various significant events.
Events
- January 21 – The Spire of Dublin is completed.[1]
 - May 11 – Benvenuto Cellini's Saliera is stolen from the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
 - June 15–November 2 – A record number of seven co-curators is involved in the 50th edition of the Venice Biennale, directed by Francesco Bonami.[2]
 - August 27 – Leonardo da Vinci's Madonna of the Yarnwinder is stolen from the Duke of Buccleuch collection at Drumlanrig Castle in Scotland.[3] It is recovered in 2007.
 - November – Gustav Klimt's Landhaus am Attersee sells for $29,128,000.
 - December 25 – Beagle 2 lands on the surface of Mars; its calibration target plate is painted by Damien Hirst.
 - date unknown – Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London takes over the Byam Shaw School of Art.
 
Exhibitions
- Jim Sanborn, Critical Assembly, Corcoran School of Art
 - Patti Smith, Strange Messenger, The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh
 
Awards
- Archibald Prize – Geoffrey Dyer, a portrait of Richard Flanagan
 - Beck's Futures – Rosalind Nashashibi
 - Schock Prize in Visual Arts – Susan Rothenberg
 - Turner Prize – Grayson Perry
 - The Venice Biennale (June 15 - November 2) -
- The Lion d'Or Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement: Michelangelo Pistoletto (Italy) and Carol Rama (Italy)
 - The Lion d'or for best artwork in the main exhibition: Fischli and Weiss (Switzerland)
 - The Lion d'Or for Best Pavilion: Sun-Mei Tse (Luxemburg)
 
 - Wynne Prize – Tim Kyle, Seated Figure
 
Works
- Eco-Earth Globe, Salem, Oregon
 - Jake and Dinos Chapman – Insult to Injury
 - Tony Cragg – Stainless Steel Pillar
 - Olafur Eliasson – The weather project (installation in Turbine Hall of Tate Modern, London)
 - David Fairbairn – Self Portrait DF
 - Cornelia Parker – The Distance (A Kiss With String Attached): Subconscious of a Monument (interventionist sculpture)
 - Michal Rovner – Data Zone[4]
 - Jørn Utzon – Homage to Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (tapestry in the Sydney Opera House)
 - Kehinde Wiley – Go
 
Films
Deaths
January to March
- 9 January – Constantin Kluge, Russian and French painter (b.1912).
 - 20 January – Al Hirschfeld, American caricaturist (b.1903).
 - 21 January – Tony O'Malley, Irish painter (b.1913).
 - 27 January – Louis Archambault, Canadian sculptor (b.1915).
 - 2 February – Emerson Woelffer, American painter (b.1914).
 - 10 February – Edgar de Evia, Mexican-born American photographer (b.1910).
 - 14 March – Jack Goldstein, Canadian-born American performance and conceptual artist turned painter (b.1945).
 
April to June
- 9 April – Jorge Oteiza, Spanish sculptor, painter, designer and writer (b.1908).
 - 16 April – Graham Stuart Thomas, English horticultural artist, author and garden designer (b.1909).
 - 23 April – Fernand Fonssagrives, French photographer (b.1910).
 - 25 April – Lynn Chadwick, 88, English sculptor
 - 29 May – Pierre Restany, French art critic and cultural philosopher (b.1930).
 - 7 June – Georges Pichard, French comics artist (b.1920).
 
July to September
- 11 July - Dorothy Miller, 99, American curator (b.1904).
 - 15 August – Kirk Varnedoe, American art historian, writer and curator (b.1946).
 - 21 August – Wesley Willis, American artist and musician (b.1963).
 - 29 August – Vladimír Vašíček, Czech painter (b.1919).
 - 1 September – Terry Frost, English artist noted for his abstracts (b.1915).
 
October to December
- 3 October – William Steig, American cartoonist, sculptor and author (b.1907).
 - 16 October – Avni Arbaş, Turkish artist (b.1919).
 - 9 November – Mario Merz, Italian artist (b.1925).
 - 4 December – David Vaughan, English psychedelic artist and muralist (b. 1944).
 - 15 December – George Fisher, American political cartoonist (b.1923).
 - 17 December – Wally Hedrick, American artist (b.1928).
 
References
- ↑ "Spire cleaners get prime view of city". Irish Independent. 5 June 2007. Archived from the original on 23 July 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2007.
 - ↑ Venice Biennale official website - Recent Years (2001-2011) Archived 2016-06-25 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 26 March 2014
 - ↑ Seenan, Gerard (2003-12-29). "Thieves steal priceless art 'for status, not profit'". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2023-08-27.
 - ↑ "artnet.com Magazine features - Vindicated at Venice". Archived from the original on 2020-11-30. Retrieved 2021-09-17.
 
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