Andy Warhol Mick Jagger For Sale
Andy Warhol: Mick Jagger Portfolio
Market Position & Series Performance
The Mick Jagger portfolio stands as one of the most actively traded Warhol print series in the secondary market, combining rock mythology with the artist's signature approach to celebrity portraiture. Guy Hepner has facilitated 478 Warhol transactions totaling over $51 million across 292 collectors, and this particular series consistently ranks among our most requested holdings.
Recent auction data confirms sustained collector appetite. F.S. II.141 achieved $252,000 at auction in October 2021, while F.S. II.138 reached $421,000 during the 2008 market peak. Current trading ranges show individual prints from the portfolio moving between $157,500 and $252,000 depending on image, condition, and provenance. These figures should be contextualized against Warhol's broader market trajectory: Shot Sage Blue Marilyn commanding $195,040,000 at Christie's in May 2022 fundamentally reset expectations for the artist's iconic imagery, while recent May 2025 results at Christie's saw Mao prints (F.S. II.96 and II.97) each reaching $4,648,000.
What distinguishes the Mick Jagger series is its dual appeal to both Warhol collectors and music memorabilia enthusiasts—a crossover that creates competitive bidding dynamics rarely seen with the artist's other portrait subjects. The collaboration between two cultural titans of the twentieth century generates collector interest that extends well beyond traditional art market participants.
Technical & Historical Context
Warhol executed the Mick Jagger portfolio in 1975, producing ten screen prints on Arches Aquarelle (Rough) paper, each measuring approximately 43½ x 29 inches. Seabird Editions published the suite in an edition of 250, with an additional 50 artist's proofs. Each impression bears the pencil signatures of both Warhol and Jagger on the front—a collaborative authentication that remains unique within Warhol's extensive print catalogue.
The source imagery derived from Polaroid photographs Warhol shot during sessions with Jagger, capturing the Rolling Stones frontman in various poses and moods. Warhol then manipulated these photographs through his established silkscreen process, overlaying gestural brushwork and vibrant color combinations that varied across the ten images. This integration of photographic realism with painterly abstraction exemplifies Warhol's mature print technique and his ongoing investigation of celebrity image-making during the mid-1970s.
The timing proved culturally significant. By 1975, both figures had achieved legendary status—Warhol as the defining voice of Pop Art, Jagger as rock's most recognizable face. Their collaboration documented a specific moment in transatlantic cultural exchange.
Individual Works & Collector Preferences
The portfolio comprises ten distinct images (F.S. II.138–147), each presenting Jagger through different color palettes and compositional treatments. Our transaction history reveals clear collector hierarchies within the series.
F.S. II.138 commands premium positioning, featuring bold red and blue passages against Jagger's profile. This image achieved $421,000 at auction and remains the most sought-after single sheet from the portfolio. Collectors respond to its graphic clarity and the confident interplay between photographic detail and abstract color blocking.
F.S. II.141 generates consistent secondary market activity, with two sales in October 2021 alone ($252,000 and $163,800), suggesting healthy liquidity for this particular image. The composition emphasizes Jagger's features through warm tonalities that photograph exceptionally well—a consideration increasingly relevant for collectors building Instagram-documented collections.
F.S. II.140 trades in a tighter range ($157,500–$163,800 based on recent results), offering entry positioning for collectors building toward complete portfolios. Complete sets (F.S. II.138–147) appear infrequently at auction; when available, they typically achieve premiums of 15–20% above the aggregate value of individual sheets, reflecting the scarcity of intact portfolios remaining in private hands.
Authentication & Condition Considerations
Authentication of the Mick Jagger prints requires verification of several series-specific markers. Legitimate impressions bear dual pencil signatures—Warhol's on the lower right, Jagger's typically on the lower left—with edition numbering. The Andy Warhol Foundation maintains authentication records, and Guy Hepner provides full provenance documentation with every transaction.
Condition assessment demands particular attention to the Arches Aquarelle paper stock. The rough texture that gives these prints their distinctive tactile quality also renders them susceptible to surface abrasion and handling wear. Collectors should examine margins carefully; foxing occasionally appears on impressions stored in suboptimal conditions, though this affects value less dramatically than comparable damage to Marilyn or Campbell's Soup prints, where pristine presentation carries greater market premium.
Color registration across the multiple screen passes should align precisely. Misregistration, while occasionally present in Warhol prints generally, typically indicates less desirable impressions pulled later in the edition run. Examine the interplay between photographic underlayer and painted overlay—crisp separation between these elements distinguishes superior impressions.
Investment Analysis & 2026 Acquisition Strategy
The Mick Jagger portfolio occupies a distinctive position within Warhol's print market. Unlike Marilyn or Mao—where trophy examples now trade in the multi-million-dollar range—Jagger prints remain accessible to serious collectors at six-figure price points while maintaining strong liquidity and institutional recognition.
Performance data suggests these works have appreciated steadily but have not yet experienced the explosive revaluation seen in Warhol's most iconic imagery. This represents strategic opportunity. As entry prices for Marilyn and Campbell's Soup prints increasingly exclude all but ultra-high-net-worth buyers, sophisticated collectors are redirecting attention toward Warhol's other major portrait series.
For 2026 acquisitions, we recommend prioritizing F.S. II.138 when available—its auction history demonstrates clear market leadership within the series. Collectors with longer time horizons should consider assembling complete portfolios opportunistically, acquiring individual sheets as condition-appropriate examples surface. The dual-signature format ensures these works will retain documentary and historical significance regardless of broader market fluctuations.
Cross-category appeal to music collectors provides downside protection absent in purely art-historical acquisitions.
Acquire Mick Jagger Prints Through Guy Hepner
Guy Hepner maintains rotating inventory across the Mick Jagger portfolio, with current availability spanning multiple images from the series. Our New York team provides condition reports, provenance documentation, and comparative market analysis for all prospective acquisitions.
Contact our advisors to discuss current holdings and acquisition strategy for this essential Warhol series.


Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 138
1975

Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 138-147
1975

Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 139
1975

Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 140
1975

Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 141
1975

Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 142
1975

Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 143
1975

Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 144
1975

Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 145
1975

Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 146
1975

Andy Warhol
Mick Jagger F.S. II 147
1975
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