Potato Jesus
Also known as: Beast Jesus · Monkey Christ · Ecce Mono · Botched Ecce Homo
Potato Jesus is the nickname for a catastrophically botched 2012 restoration of a Spanish church fresco that became one of the internet's most beloved fail memes. An 81-year-old parishioner named Cecilia Giménez attempted to touch up a deteriorating painting of Jesus in the Sanctuary of Mercy church in Borja, Spain, and the result looked less like the Son of God and more like a fuzzy monkey in a tunic2. The before-and-after photos exploded across Reddit, 4chan, and Facebook within days, spawning a photoshop meme industry, a Change.org petition to preserve the "restoration," and an unlikely tourism boom that transformed a tiny Spanish town6.
TL;DR
Potato Jesus is the nickname for a catastrophically botched 2012 restoration of a Spanish church fresco that became one of the internet's most beloved fail memes.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Potato Jesus format typically works in two ways:
As a photoshop exploitable: Users paste Potato Jesus's mangled face onto other famous artworks, movie posters, or images to comedic effect. The key is the contrast between the original's seriousness and the sloppy, childlike quality of the restoration.
As a before/after fail comparison: The three-panel format (original painting, partially damaged painting, botched restoration) is used to represent any situation where an attempted fix made things dramatically worse. Common applications include failed DIY projects, bad software updates, or any "nailed it" scenario.
The humor comes from the sincerity of the attempt colliding with the absurdity of the result.
Cultural Impact
Full History
Fun Facts
Giménez claimed the restoration was actually an unfinished work in progress. "I left it to dry and went on holiday for two weeks, thinking I would finish the restoration when I returned," she said. "The way people reacted still hurts me, because I wasn't finished".
The original painting was described by virtually every art critic as "artistically unremarkable" before the botched restoration made it world-famous.
The Spanish wordplay "Ecce Mono" ("Behold the Monkey") became a popular alternate name, riffing on the original title "Ecce Homo" ("Behold the Man").
The revenue from Potato Jesus tourism paid for elderly residents' places in Borja's care home, making it one of the few memes to directly fund social services.
The painting was never professionally re-restored. The town decided to keep Giménez's version as is, treating it as both an educational exhibit and tourist attraction.
Derivatives & Variations
Photoshop edits into famous paintings:
Potato Jesus's face was inserted into the *Mona Lisa*, *The Scream*, and other iconic works, creating a visual sub-genre of art history mashups[4].
"Cecilia Prize" generator:
BBH London's online tool let anyone create their own Potato Jesus-style restoration, with entries collected on Pinterest[5].
Beast Jesus Restoration Society:
A Facebook group and associated Tumblr that served as a hub for fan-made edits and ironic worship of the botched fresco[5].
Potato Jesus merchandise:
An official line of T-shirts, mugs, keychains, teddy bears, mouse pads, and branded wine sold to tourists in Borja[6].
Monkey Christ opera:
A comic opera telling a fictionalized version of Giménez's story, which opened in Las Vegas in 2023[4].
Botched St. George restoration (2018):
A separate incident in Estella, Spain, where a 16th-century statue was given a similarly disastrous makeover, drawing direct comparisons to Potato Jesus[13].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (19)
- 1
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- 4Potato Jesus - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5List of Internet phenomenaencyclopedia
- 6Potato Jesus - Urban Dictionarydictionary
- 7
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- 9
- 10
- 11
- 12
- 13Ecce Homoarticle
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