Gauntlet Gallery
What is Shepard Fairey’s piece called “Jonesy's Jukebox (First Edition)”?
Artist Statement
JONESY'S JUKEBOX Screen Print 18 x 24 inches Edition of 300 Signed by Shepard Fairey and Steve Jones
Summary
Jonesy's Jukebox is a 2006 Shepard Fairey screen print published by Obey Giant, measuring 18 x 24 inches in a First Edition of 300. The record notes it is signed by Shepard Fairey and Steve Jones, the Sex Pistols guitarist and host of the Jonesy's Jukebox radio program that gives the print its name. Rendered in Fairey's bold, high-contrast poster style, the image ties his punk and music affinities to a collaborative subject. The dual signature and smaller 300-piece run distinguish it within Fairey's mid-2000s music and pop-culture output.
Why It Matters
Jonesy's Jukebox sits at the intersection of Fairey's two deepest enthusiasms: punk music and collaboration. The record explicitly states the print is signed by both Shepard Fairey and Steve Jones, the Sex Pistols guitarist, which makes it a genuine artist-musician collaboration rather than a one-sided tribute. That dual signature is a meaningful differentiator for collectors, because it ties the object directly to a punk-rock figure Fairey has long admired, and it documents the cross-pollination between Fairey's poster practice and the music world he came up alongside. The First Edition of 300 is smaller than many of Fairey's same-period runs, which generally supports stronger collector interest within his music-themed catalog. As a 2006 release it predates Fairey's mainstream breakout, capturing a moment when his music collaborations were building the relationships and visual language that would later define series like his broader music portraits. For collectors who prize provenance and the story behind an object, the named co-signer gives this print a narrative weight that purely graphic editions lack, while its punk lineage anchors it firmly in the music branch of Fairey's work.
Collector Perspective
This print is a natural fit for music-focused collectors, punk and Sex Pistols fans, and anyone who values dual-signed collaborative pieces. The recorded signatures of both Shepard Fairey and Steve Jones give it provenance appeal that goes beyond the image itself, making it a conversation piece as much as a wall work. At 18 x 24 inches it frames easily for a music room, studio, or themed gallery wall. The smaller First Edition of 300 gives it a tighter footprint than many of Fairey's contemporaneous runs, which appeals to collectors seeking relative scarcity within an accessible tier. It pairs well with Fairey's other music and punk-related prints, anchoring a music-themed Fairey grouping.
Historical Context
Jonesy's Jukebox dates to April 2006 and references the Los Angeles radio show hosted by Sex Pistols guitarist Steve Jones, reflecting Fairey's long-standing immersion in punk culture. The mid-2000s were a period when Fairey actively built ties to musicians, producing show posters, album-related art, and collaborative editions that drew on the same DIY ethos as his street work. This print, co-signed by Jones, documents one of those direct artist-musician relationships. It belongs to the stretch of Fairey's career just before the 2008 Obama HOPE image expanded his audience, when his music collaborations were both personal and formative for the visual vocabulary he would carry into later, more widely known music portraits and series.
FAQ
What is Jonesy's Jukebox?
It is a 2006 Shepard Fairey screen print published by Obey Giant, named for the radio show hosted by Sex Pistols guitarist Steve Jones. It measures 18 x 24 inches and was released in a First Edition of 300, dated April 28, 2006.
Who signed this print?
According to the record, the print is signed by both Shepard Fairey and Steve Jones, making it a dual-signed collaborative piece tied directly to the punk musician who hosted the namesake program.
How big is the edition?
It is a First Edition of 300 screen prints, smaller than many of Fairey's contemporaneous 2006 runs. No additional editions are listed in the record.
What are the size and medium?
It is a screen print measuring 18 x 24 inches, published by Obey Giant in 2006. The recorded release price was 45 dollars.
Related Works
About the Artist
Shepard Fairey (b. 1970, Charleston, South Carolina) is an American street artist, graphic designer, and activist, and a graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design. His 1989 “André the Giant Has a Posse” sticker grew into the global OBEY GIANT campaign — an ongoing experiment in propaganda, obedience, and visual culture. He reached worldwide recognition with the 2008 “Hope” portrait of Barack Obama, now held by the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery. Across screen prints, stencils, murals, and collage, Fairey channels propaganda aesthetics toward themes of peace, justice, environmentalism, and civil rights. His work is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Victoria & Albert Museum, and LACMA.




