The way Jack Kirby drew Spider-Man has long fascinated me. I love Kirby's inventive and powerful work, but his Spidey usually seemed a bit “off model.” The webbing on his mask was usually different from the standard renditions and he was often missing a spider icon on his uniform. For the last year or so, I’ve saved Kirby’s Spider-Man art as I stumbled across it online.
I decided to share what I've collected. I suspect others are equally fascinated. Since I initially did this for my own amusement, I didn't keep track of sources. After researching, I think a lot of the material comes from the Jack Kirby Art Museum or Two Morrows publications. I did not remove any watermarks.
Kirby's Spider-Man Sketches and Pencils
To be fair, you can't expect characters to always be 100% correct when drawn on the fly. Click on any to enlarge.
Kirby’s Inked, Miscellaneous Work
Marvel Comics poster from 1975
Art for Toys For Tots poster.
The finished Toys For Tots poster had a spider added to Spidey's chest.
Each piece was reworked/inked by John Romita, Sr.
1970's Poster
Kirby’s Comic CoversIt's possible his Spidey was sometimes altered by the inker.
Amazing Fantasy #15, inked by Steve Ditko.
Strange Tales Annual #2, inked by ?
(I used this Spider-Man for the first image of my post.) Fantastic Four Annual #1, inked by Dick Ayers.
Amazing Spider-Man #10. Cover by Steve Ditko, but Spidey was redrawn by Kirby.
Daredevil #1, inked by Bill Everett.
Tales to Astonish #57, inked by Sol Brodsky.
At first, I thought Spidey's eyepiece extended up his head.
It's actually just shading.
Avengers #11, inked by Chic Stone.
Was Spidey altered by Ditko? It looks like it, but I suspect the background webbing is all Kirby.Updated!
Update #2!
Here are a couple of Kirby pieces from a 1966 Esquire. (To see more of this interesting issue, click here.)
Here are a couple of Kirby pieces from a 1966 Esquire. (To see more of this interesting issue, click here.)
Wonderful to have these together. Thanks for taking the time to our benefit.
ReplyDeleteThanks for taking the time to research and post this. It was a fun and interesting read.
ReplyDeleteThanks! I have a fun one to add once I receive something I ordered from ebay in a couple of weeks.
ReplyDeleteI'm not the biggest Kirby fan in the world. It's like he never heard of a waist, everybody has a tree trunk for a torso.
ReplyDeleteNeil Gaiman once met a man who "looked like a Kirby character". He asked him what he was, and it was a dwarf with gigantism!
Oddly, in his early romance comics Kirby drew beautiful women, I don't know why he did away with that.
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ReplyDeleteSpider-Man's cameo in FF Annual #3, not FF #73 as you list on your page, was a cut & paste of Ditko art from ASM #19, which is why it looks reminiscent of the cover art.
ReplyDeleteOops. Thanks for catching my typo! I'll fix it. I don't think the panel art was cut and paste. His left leg is in a different position.
ReplyDeleteThe poster of spidey with the sentinels was copied for a panel in an issue of the fantastic four the world's greatest comic book magazine from early 2000s that was coordinated by Bruce Timm and Erik Larsen. I'll have to look for issue page artist and inker info. I believe it was issue with sentinel cover by jae Lee and Bruce Timm.
ReplyDelete"Amazing Spider-Man #10. Cover by Steve Ditko, but Spidey was redrawn by Kirby."
ReplyDeleteOdd that Kirby would re-draw a Ditko Spider-Man, when Ditko was THE Spider-Man artist!
I love Jack Kirby so much, but somehow he never could draw Spider-Man worth a damn. It's more than the fact that he didn't have the patience to get the webbing right -- he just seemed to have no feel for the character at all. Which is, I suppose, understandable since all the characters he did have a feel for were his own creations. His imagination was so fertile he just didn't have the time or inclination to get familiar with other people's characters.
ReplyDeleteI love your content. You are obviously a student of comic book history. I wish I had one of these Kirby sketches, drawings, covers, or panels for my own - I would put it in a safe, not just a comic sleeve.
ReplyDelete