Meet the illustrator behind hundreds of Windsor rock show posters - Action News
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Meet the illustrator behind hundreds of Windsor rock show posters

For the past 13 years, Windsor artist Greg Maxwell has been creating promotional posters and flyers for local rock music shows under his personal brand: The Ugly Vision. In an era of digital and AI-assisted art, Maxwell sticks to pen and paper.

Windsor artist Greg Maxwell estimates he's hand-drawn 300+ posters and flyers

Promoting Windsor's music scene with 'The Ugly Vision'

5 months ago
Duration 2:11
Windsor illustrator Greg Maxwell estimates he's hand-drawn 300 to 400 local music show posters and flyers since 2011. He calls his personal brand The Ugly Vision.

If you've been to any Windsor rock music shows over the past decade, you've likely seen the work of The Ugly Vision.

That's the personal brand of local illustrator Greg Maxwell, who estimates he's hand-drawn 300 to 400 music show posters and flyers since 2011 the vast majority of them featuring local bands and artists.

A man smiles in front of a wall full of colourful posters and flyers.
Windsor artist Greg Maxwell in front of examples of rock music flyers and posters he created under his Ugly Vision brand. (Dalson Chen/CBC)

"I've lost count," saidMaxwell, 37. "I grew up in bands in high school and friends of mine just started asking me to do their posters. That's kind of how I started. And then just word of mouth spread and I started doing more and more."

It didn't take long for Maxwell to forge his own style, influenced by punk rock, cartoons, comic booksand B-movies.

A rock music poster showing a tentacled being.
An example of Windsor artist Greg Maxwell's rock art for the local band Cellos. (Dalson Chen/CBC)

"Rough, crude," Maxwell says, describing his personal aesthetic. "Sometimes horror. Macabre sensibilities. I try to keep things kind of sloppy."

One hallmark of The Ugly Vision: A surreal drippinessto words, facesand objects. "I love drips. They're fun to draw," Maxwell said.

A poster showing a young woman wearing rock and roll makeup.
Windsor artist Greg Maxwell's depiction of Olivia Rodrigo in KISS makeup for a poster promoting Dr. Disc record store. (Dalson Chen/CBC)

He's also known to re-purpose celebrity faces. A promotional poster for Windsor record store Dr. Disc drew wider attention because Maxwell depicted pop star Olivia Rodrigo wearing the iconic makeup of KISS bassist Gene Simmons.

"Gene Simmons shared it a few times on his social media," Maxwell said. "So my social media kind of blew up for a couple days, and that was a lot of fun."

A man drawing at a table.
Windsor artist Greg Maxwell in his workspace. (Dalson Chen/CBC)

Another source of inspiration for Maxwell isthe work of Raymond Pettibon, whose sinister illustrations adorned the album covers and promotional materials for the hardcore punk band Black Flag in the 1980s.

Like Pettibon, Maxwell does most of his work with little more than a pen and paper. "80 to 90 per cent hand-drawn," Maxwell said. "Then I usually scan it and it's coloured digitally, so there is some computer going on in there. But everything, for the most part, is hand-drawn, originally."

A rock music flyer.
A flyer created by Windsor artist Greg Maxwell promoting a show with the rock band By Divine Right. (Dalson Chen/CBC)

Maxwell doesn't even have a special workplace. His drawing spot in his apartment is a standard desk illuminated by a cheap lamp and his balcony window.

As for the suggestion of going fully digital, as many modern illustrators have done, Maxwell is wary. "I don't want to call myself a Luddite, but I don't grasp technology as well as some people do... Keeping the old ways of doing things I enjoy that, when it comes to art and music especially."

A drawing promoting CBC Windsor.
A drawing by Windsor artist Greg Maxwell (a.k.a. The Ugly Vision). (Dalson Chen/CBC)

"I don't like seeing things go digital because I like the idea of there being a tangible item. Somebody can pull the flyer down after a show It's a keepsake."

Maxwell's customers seem to appreciate his old-school non-digital philosophy. He's been a steady supplier of show poster and flyer art for such Windsor-based artistsas The Blue Stones, Huttch, Ron Leary, James O-L and the Villains, and countless others.

He's also done work for legendary visiting bands such as D.O.A., S.N.F.U.and By Divine Right.

"I still love going to the shows that I do posters for," Maxwell said. "I see no end in sight, just yet... I do enjoy having free reign to draw goblins and creatures and zombies and stuff like that on posters."

A poster promoting a music show.
An example of Greg Maxwell's rock music flyer art for Windsor folk artist Ron Leary. (Dalson Chen/CBC)