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© 2013—2025 Boxing News

Magazine

A ‘Monster’ on the canvas – Naoya Inoue artwork

Ingo Wegerich

21st October, 2025

A ‘Monster’ on the canvas – Naoya Inoue artwork

NAOYA Inoue – the “Monster” warrior from Japan. A name that commands awe throughout the boxing world. What began as a quiet display of Japanese discipline has exploded into a spectacle of precision, dynamism, and power.

Inoue enters the ring with the calm of a samurai – but once the bell rings, he becomes a force of nature. His punches are surgical, cold, and ruthless. Every jab, every hook carries the strength of generations of fighters who turned discipline and precision into an art form in Japan.

From light-flyweight to super-bantamweight, Inoue has dismantled everything in his path. 27 knockouts in 31 fights, an incredible number for the lower weight classes, impressive victories over stars like Nonito Donaire, a masterclass demolition of Stephen Fulton, and that historic night at the Tokyo Dome, sold out for a boxer for the first time since Mike Tyson. Over 43,000 fans packed the iconic arena as Inoue took Fulton apart round by round – a show of dominance that cemented his status as a living legend.

His fights are more than sporting contests – they’re modern-day rituals of war: a dance between beauty and brutality. When he stands in the corner, his expression unreadable, it’s as if he already knows how the fight will end – only his opponent doesn’t. Inoue embodies the ideal of the modern champion: disciplined, deadly accurate, with no wasted motion.

He speaks little, but his fists tell entire stories. In an age of showmanship, he remains a purist – a master of control, a man who rules the darkness inside the ring. Each victory adds to his legend, every punch echoes like thunder across the boxing world: Naoya Inoue, the Monster who came to make history. 

This painting may not be widely known – yet it was featured on the cover of the official dinner programme of the Boxing Writers Association of America (BWAA) and depicts Naoya Inoue, the male Fighter of the Year 2023.

On its website, the BWAA states:

“The Boxing Writers Association of America is proud to announce its annual winners for 2023.

Based on his brilliant 2023 year, the BWAA is proud to announce Naoya Inoue as the 2023 Fighter of the Year, based on his victories over then-undefeated WBC/WBO 122-pound titleholder Stephen Fulton in July and WBA/IBF 122-pound belt holder Marlon Tapales in December.

Inoue (26-0, 23 KOs) makes history as the first Japanese fighter to win the prestigious honour in the 85-year history of the award…”

This masterpiece was painted by the renowned artist Richard T. Slone, who has, for many years, created the official Fighter of the Year portraits for the BWAA.


The artist 

Richard T. Slone, a British-born artist now based in Las Vegas, once a protégé of Joe Frazier and part of the famed Kronk Gym, has become one of boxing’s greatest artists. Since 1996, he has created the official artworks of the International Boxing Hall of Fame. Slone was commissioned as the official artist for such historic fights as Mayweather vs Pacquiao, Mayweather vs Canelo or Canelo vs Golovkin. 

His work graces countless Ring Magazine and Boxing News covers, capturing the true emotion and drama of the sport.


The painting

The painting by Richard T. Slone, created in honour of Naoya Inoue, the Fighter of the Year 2023 of the Boxing Writers Association of America (BWAA), portrays the Japanese champion in a moment of utmost concentration and contained energy – a perfect balance between control and explosive power.

Slone, known for his precise and detailed style that nonetheless conveys movement, dynamism, and emotion, distils Inoue’s essence into a single electrifying instant – a fighter in motion, suspended between attack and control. The vertical composition elongates the figure, heightening the sense of unstoppable forward drive, as if Inoue were breaking through the limits of the canvas itself.

The colour palette is restrained yet powerful: warm reds and flesh tones contrast with the cool greys of the background, reflecting both the heat of combat and the cold focus of the warrior. Slone’s characteristic layered brushstrokes reveal both movement and detail – sweat, tension, and physical strength become tangible through light and structure; everything vibrates with energy. Inoue’s face, rendered with precision amid painterly concentration, reveals not anger but determination, focus, and unshakeable belief.

There is no ring, no opponent, no audience – only the fighter himself, a symbol of excellence and discipline. By stripping away all external context, Slone elevates Inoue into the realm of myth. This work is more than a portrait – it is a meditation on the very essence of a champion.

In portraying the first Japanese boxer ever to receive the BWAA’s highest honour, Slone captures a moment of cultural transcendence – a union of art and sport that celebrates a fighter whose spirit, like the brushstrokes that define him, will never fade. 


Personal note from the owner 

I’ve seen Naoya Inoue – one of my favourite fighters – live twice. The first time was during Tom Loeffler’s Superfly Series against Antonio Nieves on September 9, 2017, at the then StubHub Center in Carson, near Los Angeles. The second time was this year in Las Vegas, when he fought Ramon Cardenas – a trip I made all the way from Germany just to be there.

When Richard T. Slone told me he was painting Inoue for the BWAA Fighter of the Year, I instantly knew I had to own that piece. I eventually bought it as a birthday gift to myself. 

I love this artwork so much! 

My boxing bucket list is already quite full – I’ve seen a lot – but right now, Inoue vs. Nakatani at the Tokyo Dome sits right at the very top of my wishlist. 

The details of the painting are as follows: 

Naoya Inoue

Original

2024

Richard T Slone

11″ x 30″

Acrylic on canvas 

*Copyright Richard T. Slone

You can view more of Ingo’s artwork on his website, Ingo Wegerich Fine Art Collection, or contact him via Instagram.

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