27/04/2026
Whitworth Art Gallery Theft: Three Artworks Stolen - All Recovered.
In the early hours of 27th April 2003, three works by Picasso, Gauguin and Van Gogh were stolen from Manchester’s Whitworth Gallery. The next day, following a telephone tip-off, they were recovered in a public lavatory on the edge of a small park, 200 metres away.
No one has ever been charged over the theft. The thief bypassed the gallery’s security system and removed the fragile watercolours from their frames to roll them up into a cardboard tube. This was later abandoned lent up against the closed lavatory building. Along with the recovered paintings was a note saying that “the intention was not to steal only to highlight the woeful security”.
The paintings had been left next to sodden leaves and litter on an extremely rainy day, so unsurprisingly the Van Gogh, ‘Fortifications of Paris with Horses’ watercolour suffered damage, with a 12cm tear to its right side, creasing and minor paint losses - now restored.
The gallery has since upgraded its security systems and now stands on par with that of national museums. The theft demonstrates a constant anxiety for regional museums who must balance budgeting for their collections against security measures.
All three items were immediately registered on the Art Loss Register database on the day of the theft to ensure they were not moved quickly through the market.
Artworks:
- Pablo Picasso, ‘Poverty’, 1903
- Paul Gauguin, ‘Tahitian Landscape’, 1891-93
- Vincent van Gogh, ‘The Fortifications of Paris with Houses’, 1878