Radio shock jock Alan Jones has made a career out of controversy. Here are some of his most infamous comments.

A mural depicting shock jock Alan Jones wearing a ball gag head harness has popped up on an inner city wall.

Sydney-based artist Scott Marsh posted a photo of the Chippendale artwork on Sunday morning, along with the hashtag #wouldntitbenice.

The image shows the outspoken radio host clad in a pink suit and tie with a white shirt and strapped into a brown head harness with a bright red ball gag.

It follows Jones’ controversial comments a week ago about New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

Jones criticised Ms Ardern after she said “Australia has to answer to the Pacific” on climate change during a forum in Tuvalu, and suggested Prime Minister Scott Morrison “shove a sock down her throat”.

Marsh, who finished the mural on Saturday after about 10 hours work, said he thought the comments were “pretty distasteful”.

“It’s a bit of social commentary, for starters, and then also I’m not a huge fan of Alan Jones,” Marsh said.

“I thought they were pretty distasteful, and he’s said a lot of things to that kind of effect in the past.”

Jones has since apologised for his comments but last Saturday was threatened with the sack by employer Macquarie Radio. A number of advertisers have also abandoned his breakfast show on Sydney’s 2GB and 4BC in Brisbane.

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Dozens of people contacted Marsh requesting that he do a mural of the shock jock following the comments.

“I had so many, dozens of people say, ‘you have to paint Alan Jones’, so that was a big part of it because I didn’t really have time to paint it to be honest,” Marsh said.

“Alan’s got a pretty big ego I think, so we’ll see if he loves it or he hates it, I’m not quite sure yet,” he said.

A number of people spotted Marsh painting the mural and were “super supportive of it,” he said.

“They all had a few choice words about Alan Jones.”

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Marsh has previously painted murals in other inner Sydney locations, including depictions of former prime minister Tony Abbott marrying himself, and Mr Abbott dressed as a bride with one hand down the pants of a shirtless Cardinal George Pell.

He has also painted murals of US rapper Kanye West kissing himself, former NSW premier Mike Baird holding a glass of red wine, a kebab and a cigarette with a stack of casino chips in front of him, and late singer George Michael depicted as a saint.

A number of the artworks have been the subject of controversy and targeted by vandals.

Macquarie Media has been contacted for comment.