Havok
HAVOK is a fake luchador magazine cover—an homage to vintage Mexican wrestling culture and the visual drama that surrounded it. It borrows heavily from mid-century lucha libre magazines: weathered paper, bold type, theatrical mystery, and just enough ambiguity to make you lean in closer.
I’ve always loved luchador culture—not just the wrestling, but the mythology around it. The masks. The personas. The way entertainment, identity, and folklore blur together. These old magazines treated wrestlers like folk heroes and criminals at the same time, constantly asking who is really under the mask? That tension is the point.
This piece is just about that question. The cover features the elusive HAVOK… or is it Victor Jiminez? Or Victor Ramirez? The typography suggests a reveal without ever delivering one. It’s all spectacle. That’s lucha libre at its best.
Visually, it’s designed to feel pulled from a stack of old magazines found in a flea market—creased, worn, sun-faded, and handled too many times. The colors are muted and earthy, the texture intentionally imperfect. Even though it’s a digital work, it’s meant to feel physical and aged, like it already has a history.
As wall art, HAVOK adds a dose of old Mexican entertainment energy—bold, nostalgic, and a little mysterious. It works especially well in modern spaces that could use some cultural contrast and character. Framed clean or left a little raw, it reads as both graphic design and storytelling.
It doesn’t explain itself. It doesn’t need to.
¡Viva la Lucha Libre!