Details
ISHINOMORI SHOTARO (1938-1998)
Kamen Rider: Terror of the Spider Man, 1971
original artwork accompanied by a coloring instruction sheet; ink, color and colored pencil on paper, numbered 8 on top right corner and titled on bottom left corner
1058 x 15 in. (27 x 38.1 cm.) each
Provenance
Asahi Sonorama, Tokyo
Natsume-Books, Tokyo, 15 March 2025
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Lot Essay

A motorcycle surges forward from the picture plane, its great insect eyes gleaming as speed lines burst outward. Below, a striped monster seizes a fallen figure against a field of burning red. In Ishinomori Shotaro’s Kamen Rider, the hero appears at the instant of intervention, descending into the scene like a modern warrior.
The present artwork was created for illustrated comic pages accompanying the vinyl record of the Kamen Rider theme song, depicting the hero confronting the spider monster Kumo Otoko, one of the early villains from the television series.
The masked visage recalls older traditions of concealment and performance. Faces hidden behind the carved restraint of noh and the heightened expressions of kabuki, two longstanding traditions of Japanese theatre, find an echo in the Rider helmet. Its form also suggests the sweeping crests of samurai armor (Lot 15), where identity is concealed yet powerfully declared.
Transformation lies at the center of this mythology. The raised arms and emphatic stance recall the dramatic stillness of the mie (theatrical pose) of kabuki, reimagined as the ritualized henshin (transformation). The medieval warrior returns as a solitary rider confronting hidden forces, the motorcycle replacing the warhorse of earlier legend. The dynamic energy of battle scenes by Utagawa Kuniyoshi (Lot 11) reappears in Ishinomori’s cinematic manga compositions.
First broadcast in 1971, the series followed earlier television heroes such as Ultraman yet helped define the transformation hero format. Its influence later extended beyond Japan through adaptations including Power Rangers. Engine humming, the rider moves toward the horizon, where power finds its purpose in protection.

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