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Turner Prize 2003
This year's artists

As ever, it was a mixed bunch of artists in the shortlist for the 2003 Turner Prize. Two bad boys, one Irish film-maker, one sculptor of decay, and one happily-married transvestite potter make this another provocative and challenging year.

Jake and Dinos Chapman

The brothers Chapman seek to provoke. If they don't create 'absolute moral panic' in those looking at their work, they think they've failed. Earlier in their career they mutilated mannequins with blood and gore, or added misplaced genitalia. They have graffitied the works of the Spanish master Francisco de Goya, and now, in a brazen hoax, they're creating primitive totems that feature modern consumer items such as McDonald's fries.

Jake and Dinos Chapman - Insult to Injury 2003

Jake and Dinos Chapman
Insult to Injury 2003
Francisco de Goya 'Disasters of War'
Portfolio of 80 etchings reworked and improved
37 x 47 cm
© Courtesy Jay Jopling/White Cube (London)
Photo: Stephen White

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Willie Doherty

With his background in the political factionalism of Ireland, film-maker Willie Doherty uses his art to question what the modern media tells the public. According to Doherty, images from photography, advertising, television and cinema distort the truth, resulting in a kind of collective false-memory syndrome which he demonstrates in his own installations and photography.

Willie Doherty - RE-RUN 2002

Willie Doherty
RE-RUN 2002
Video installation with projection on two screens (colour, 30 seconds). First shown XXV Bienal de Sao Paulo, Brazil 2002
Tate. Purchased 2003
© Courtesy the artist, Matt's Gallery, London and Alexander and Bonin, New York
Photo: John Riddy

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Anya Gallaccio

Rotting flowers, melting ice and decaying fruit form part of Anya Gallacio's 'aesthetic of the organic'. She has cast trees in bronze, adorned them with real apples, and then allowed the fruit to decompose on the gallery floor. Her works are often elegiac studies of the passage of time.

Anya Gallaccio - As long as there were any roads to amnesia and anaesthesia still to be explored 2002

Anya Gallaccio
As long as there were any roads to amnesia and anaesthesia still to be explored 2002
Seven felled oak trees
© Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York
Photo: Steve White

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Grayson Perry (winner 2003)

The art of Grayson Perry is a contradiction in terms. He makes lustrous classic urns in the tradition of the great civilisations, and adorns them with the bitter images of our own way of life – such as empty consumerism, unhappy marriage and child abuse. He is also a happily-married transvestite with a media-friendly alter ego called Claire.

Grayson Perry - Golden Ghosts 2001

Grayson Perry
Golden Ghosts 2001
Earthenware
63.2 x 26.8 x 26.8 cm
© Courtesy the artist and Victoria Miro Gallery, London

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See how this year's artists compare with others in 20 years of the Turner Prize

Jake and Dinos Chapman

Jake and Dinos Chapman
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Willie Doherty

Willie Doherty
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Anya Gallaccio

Anya Gallaccio
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Grayson Perry

Grayson Perry
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