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SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print
SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print
SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print
SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print
SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print
SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print
SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print
SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print - Signari Gallery
SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print - Signari Gallery
SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print - Signari Gallery
SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' Screen Print

SHEPARD FAIREY 'Bob Marley Print' (2014) Screen Print

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'Bob Marley Print' by Shepard Fairey, 2014
Limited Edition print collab. with legendary rock music photographer Dennis Morris.
Originally only offered during Known Gallery show on April 1, 2014.
18 x 24 Inches
45.7 x 61 Centimeters
Screen print on cream, Speckletone fine art paper.
Limited Edition of 450 (#106/450)
Hand-signed, numbered and dated by the artist.
Also signed by photographer Dennis Morris.

ABOUT THE ART

“I bought Bob Marley’s Rastaman Vibrations shortly after I started skateboarding in 1984, purely because the only good skateboard ramp where I lived was called “The Rasta Ramp.” I had mostly been listening to punk rock, but I was excited to discover reggae, which even more boldly embodied many of the same elements of social protest as punk but in a way that was much more palatable to my parents.

I think my parents bought me Bob Marley and the Wailers records for every Christmas or birthday until I had accumulated their entire catalog; my very conservative grandmother even bought me a Bob Marley shirt from Jamaica. I leaned more towards punk, but some punk bands, most notably Bad Brains, embraced both punk and reggae.

Bob Marley’s music always cheered me up during my high-school years of personal struggle. I’m always inspired by how steadfast and positive Bob was.” (quote from Shepard’s 20th Year Supply & Demand)

- Shepard