Potato Jesus

2012Exploitable / photoshop memeclassic

Also known as: Beast Jesus · Monkey Christ · Ecce Mono · Botched Ecce Homo

Potato Jesus is a 2012 photoshop meme about Cecilia Giménez's catastrophically botched restoration of a Jesus fresco that resembled a fuzzy monkey.

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

The meme centers on a side-by-side comparison of a church fresco before and after an elderly woman's unauthorized restoration attempt. The original painting, *Ecce Homo* ("Behold the Man"), depicted Jesus crowned with thorns in a traditional devotional style. After Giménez's intervention, Christ's face was reduced to a shapeless blob with lopsided eyes, no discernible nose, and what BBC correspondent Christian Fraser described as looking like "a crayon sketch of a very hairy monkey in an ill-fitting tunic"2. The *Daily Mail* compared it to a werewolf, while others saw E.T. riding in Elliott's bicycle basket4. The format became an exploitable template, with the mangled face edited into famous paintings, movie posters, and other memes5.

The *Ecce Homo* fresco was painted around 1930 by Spanish artist Elías García Martínez and donated to the Santuario de la Misericordia in Borja, a small town in the Zaragoza province of northeastern Spain2. The painting had deteriorated over the decades due to moisture damage on the church walls1.

Cecilia Giménez, born June 16, 1931, was an elderly parishioner and amateur painter who grew distressed watching her favorite depiction of Jesus flake away12. Sometime around mid-July 2012, she began applying heavy blocks of color over the fresco, intending to add detail later4. She claimed the local priest knew about and approved her work: "The priest knew it. I've never tried to do anything hidden," she told Spanish national television11. She left town for a two-week holiday before finishing, planning to return and complete the fine details2.

While she was away, the Centro de Estudios Borjanos discovered the altered fresco and published before-and-after photographs on its blog under the headline "An Unspeakable Fact"4. On August 21, 2012, the Spanish newspaper *Heraldo de Aragón* ran a story calling the result "a chapuza" (a botch job), quoting the town's culture delegate Juan María Ojeda saying "unfortunately, it was already too late"1.

That same day, Reddit user rolmos posted the photos to r/pics with the title "An old church in Spain needed to restore a worn out painting. They hired the wrong person," pulling over 11,000 upvotes and 750 comments within two days5. On August 22, a 4chan thread coined the nickname "Potato Jesus," riffing on the "I Can Count to Potato" image macro series5.

Origin & Background

Platform
Heraldo.es / Centro de Estudios Borjanos blog (news coverage), Reddit / 4chan (meme spread)
Key People
Cecilia Giménez, Elías García Martínez
Date
2012
Year
2012

The *Ecce Homo* fresco was painted around 1930 by Spanish artist Elías García Martínez and donated to the Santuario de la Misericordia in Borja, a small town in the Zaragoza province of northeastern Spain. The painting had deteriorated over the decades due to moisture damage on the church walls.

Cecilia Giménez, born June 16, 1931, was an elderly parishioner and amateur painter who grew distressed watching her favorite depiction of Jesus flake away. Sometime around mid-July 2012, she began applying heavy blocks of color over the fresco, intending to add detail later. She claimed the local priest knew about and approved her work: "The priest knew it. I've never tried to do anything hidden," she told Spanish national television. She left town for a two-week holiday before finishing, planning to return and complete the fine details.

While she was away, the Centro de Estudios Borjanos discovered the altered fresco and published before-and-after photographs on its blog under the headline "An Unspeakable Fact". On August 21, 2012, the Spanish newspaper *Heraldo de Aragón* ran a story calling the result "a chapuza" (a botch job), quoting the town's culture delegate Juan María Ojeda saying "unfortunately, it was already too late".

That same day, Reddit user rolmos posted the photos to r/pics with the title "An old church in Spain needed to restore a worn out painting. They hired the wrong person," pulling over 11,000 upvotes and 750 comments within two days. On August 22, a 4chan thread coined the nickname "Potato Jesus," riffing on the "I Can Count to Potato" image macro series.

How It Spread

The meme moved at blistering speed. On August 22, 2012, the Facebook group "Beast Jesus Restoration Society" launched and pulled in over 4,050 likes in under two weeks. A single-topic Tumblr blog followed the next day, dedicated to photoshopped versions of the painting. A Twitter account, @FrescoJesus, gained nearly 7,000 followers in the same period.

On August 24, the creative agency BBH London launched the "Cecilia Prize," an online restoration generator app that invited users to create their own interpretations of the painting. Submissions were collected on a Pinterest board and shared under the hashtag #ceciliaprize, with coverage from AdWeek and CNet noting the winner would receive a poster of the original fresco.

A Change.org petition urging officials not to remove Giménez's work attracted over 22,000 signatures, calling the botched painting "daring" and framing it as an example of Expressionism. By mid-September 2012, the story had been covered by major outlets in 160 countries.

The photoshop meme format took on a life of its own, with Potato Jesus's face inserted into Edvard Munch's *The Scream*, Leonardo da Vinci's *Mona Lisa*, and countless other famous works. The format became shorthand for any good thing ruined by incompetence.

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

Potato Jesus broke out of internet culture and into mainstream consciousness almost immediately. News outlets in 160 countries covered the story within weeks of it going viral. Forbes ran a tongue-in-cheek defense calling the restoration "one woman's vision of her savior, uncompromised by schooling". *The Guardian*'s Jonathan Jones argued Giménez had achieved what no art professional could, bringing a virtually invisible work into global pop culture relevance.

The artistic group Wallpeople presented hundreds of reworked versions of the image on a wall near Barcelona's Centre de Cultura Contemporània in September 2012, with an organizer declaring "Cecilia has created a pop icon". Spanish actress Assumpta Serna co-produced the documentary *Fresco Fiasco* and acted in the film *Behold the Monkey*, both airing on Sky Arts in the UK in 2016.

The meme's most tangible legacy was economic. *The Cut* called Potato Jesus's tourism revival "the first known economic miracle performed by a meme". The revenue stream it created for Borja's elderly care system persisted for over a decade, funding real social services long after the initial viral wave subsided.

Full History

The immediate aftermath was brutal for Giménez. On August 23, 2012, Spanish newspaper *El Mundo* reported that the 81-year-old was bedridden with anxiety attacks, refusing to eat, and too afraid to leave her home due to media harassment and the flood of tourists descending on Borja. Neighbors told reporters they were trying to get her to eat as she had become "desganada" (listless) from the stress. The town initially considered legal action and even discussed closing the church to prevent further incidents.

But the story took an improbable turn. Instead of destroying Borja, Potato Jesus saved it. The church imposed a one-euro admission fee and collected upwards of €2,000 in just four days during the initial surge. Ryanair offered discounted €12 flights from surrounding cities to the nearest airport for meme tourists. By December 2014, the *New York Times* reported that 150,000 visitors had traveled to Borja to see the painting in person, each paying for the privilege.

The economic windfall was real. The admission revenue funded jobs for church caretakers and paid for places at Borja's care home for elderly residents who otherwise couldn't afford to live there. A full interpretation center dedicated to the artwork opened in March 2016. The €3 tickets generated over €40,000 annually, with roughly €15,000 going directly to fund spots for elderly residents in the town's retirement home.

Giménez's personal arc shifted too. She lawyered up and sought royalties from the church's new revenue stream. Her lawyer explained this wasn't opportunism; she wanted her share directed to muscular dystrophy charities because her son suffered from the condition. A 2013 agreement with the local council granted Giménez 49% of profits from all merchandise featuring her restoration, including T-shirts, mugs, keychains, magnets, teddy bears, mouse pads, and even Potato Jesus wine. She used much of the income for charitable donations.

The town's annual tourist numbers eventually settled from the initial explosion. By 2018, Borja was receiving about 16,000 visitors per year, still more than four times the pre-meme average. Mayor Eduardo Arilla acknowledged the meme's impact: "It was a media phenomenon, but it's also been a social phenomenon when it comes to helping people. If it hadn't happened, maybe Borja would have become famous for something else, like its wine".

Giménez herself found a second act. She held local art exhibitions, participated in events tied to her unexpected fame, and sold a painting at online auction for $1,400. She appeared in a music video, and in 2023, *Monkey Christ*, a comic opera telling a fictionalized version of her story, opened in Las Vegas. As the opera's librettist Andrew Flack put it, Giménez's story illustrated that "your disaster could be my miracle".

The Potato Jesus incident also kicked off a mini-genre of botched restoration memes. In 2018, a 16th-century wooden statue of St. George at a church in Estella, Spain, was given a makeover that left the saint looking like a cartoon character, drawing immediate comparisons to the Ecce Homo debacle.

Giménez died on December 29, 2025, at the age of 94. The Santuario de Misericordia described her as "a devoted mother and a fighter" and praised the affection she had gained worldwide. Borja's mayor paid tribute, noting she had been widowed while raising two children with disabilities. Speaking publicly in 2015, Giménez had reflected on her legacy with warmth: "Everyone here sees what I did in a different light. The restoration has put Borja on the world map, meaning I've done something for my village that nobody else was able to do".

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. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
  6. 6
  7. 7
  8. 8
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
    Ecce Homoarticle
  14. 14
  15. 15
  16. 16
  17. 17
  18. 18
  19. 19

Potato Jesus

2012Exploitable / photoshop memeclassic

Also known as: Beast Jesus · Monkey Christ · Ecce Mono · Botched Ecce Homo

Potato Jesus is a 2012 photoshop meme about Cecilia Giménez's catastrophically botched restoration of a Jesus fresco that resembled a fuzzy monkey.

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 tunic. 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 town.

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

The meme centers on a side-by-side comparison of a church fresco before and after an elderly woman's unauthorized restoration attempt. The original painting, *Ecce Homo* ("Behold the Man"), depicted Jesus crowned with thorns in a traditional devotional style. After Giménez's intervention, Christ's face was reduced to a shapeless blob with lopsided eyes, no discernible nose, and what BBC correspondent Christian Fraser described as looking like "a crayon sketch of a very hairy monkey in an ill-fitting tunic". The *Daily Mail* compared it to a werewolf, while others saw E.T. riding in Elliott's bicycle basket. The format became an exploitable template, with the mangled face edited into famous paintings, movie posters, and other memes.

The *Ecce Homo* fresco was painted around 1930 by Spanish artist Elías García Martínez and donated to the Santuario de la Misericordia in Borja, a small town in the Zaragoza province of northeastern Spain. The painting had deteriorated over the decades due to moisture damage on the church walls.

Cecilia Giménez, born June 16, 1931, was an elderly parishioner and amateur painter who grew distressed watching her favorite depiction of Jesus flake away. Sometime around mid-July 2012, she began applying heavy blocks of color over the fresco, intending to add detail later. She claimed the local priest knew about and approved her work: "The priest knew it. I've never tried to do anything hidden," she told Spanish national television. She left town for a two-week holiday before finishing, planning to return and complete the fine details.

While she was away, the Centro de Estudios Borjanos discovered the altered fresco and published before-and-after photographs on its blog under the headline "An Unspeakable Fact". On August 21, 2012, the Spanish newspaper *Heraldo de Aragón* ran a story calling the result "a chapuza" (a botch job), quoting the town's culture delegate Juan María Ojeda saying "unfortunately, it was already too late".

That same day, Reddit user rolmos posted the photos to r/pics with the title "An old church in Spain needed to restore a worn out painting. They hired the wrong person," pulling over 11,000 upvotes and 750 comments within two days. On August 22, a 4chan thread coined the nickname "Potato Jesus," riffing on the "I Can Count to Potato" image macro series.

Origin & Background

Platform
Heraldo.es / Centro de Estudios Borjanos blog (news coverage), Reddit / 4chan (meme spread)
Key People
Cecilia Giménez, Elías García Martínez
Date
2012
Year
2012

The *Ecce Homo* fresco was painted around 1930 by Spanish artist Elías García Martínez and donated to the Santuario de la Misericordia in Borja, a small town in the Zaragoza province of northeastern Spain. The painting had deteriorated over the decades due to moisture damage on the church walls.

Cecilia Giménez, born June 16, 1931, was an elderly parishioner and amateur painter who grew distressed watching her favorite depiction of Jesus flake away. Sometime around mid-July 2012, she began applying heavy blocks of color over the fresco, intending to add detail later. She claimed the local priest knew about and approved her work: "The priest knew it. I've never tried to do anything hidden," she told Spanish national television. She left town for a two-week holiday before finishing, planning to return and complete the fine details.

While she was away, the Centro de Estudios Borjanos discovered the altered fresco and published before-and-after photographs on its blog under the headline "An Unspeakable Fact". On August 21, 2012, the Spanish newspaper *Heraldo de Aragón* ran a story calling the result "a chapuza" (a botch job), quoting the town's culture delegate Juan María Ojeda saying "unfortunately, it was already too late".

That same day, Reddit user rolmos posted the photos to r/pics with the title "An old church in Spain needed to restore a worn out painting. They hired the wrong person," pulling over 11,000 upvotes and 750 comments within two days. On August 22, a 4chan thread coined the nickname "Potato Jesus," riffing on the "I Can Count to Potato" image macro series.

How It Spread

The meme moved at blistering speed. On August 22, 2012, the Facebook group "Beast Jesus Restoration Society" launched and pulled in over 4,050 likes in under two weeks. A single-topic Tumblr blog followed the next day, dedicated to photoshopped versions of the painting. A Twitter account, @FrescoJesus, gained nearly 7,000 followers in the same period.

On August 24, the creative agency BBH London launched the "Cecilia Prize," an online restoration generator app that invited users to create their own interpretations of the painting. Submissions were collected on a Pinterest board and shared under the hashtag #ceciliaprize, with coverage from AdWeek and CNet noting the winner would receive a poster of the original fresco.

A Change.org petition urging officials not to remove Giménez's work attracted over 22,000 signatures, calling the botched painting "daring" and framing it as an example of Expressionism. By mid-September 2012, the story had been covered by major outlets in 160 countries.

The photoshop meme format took on a life of its own, with Potato Jesus's face inserted into Edvard Munch's *The Scream*, Leonardo da Vinci's *Mona Lisa*, and countless other famous works. The format became shorthand for any good thing ruined by incompetence.

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

Potato Jesus broke out of internet culture and into mainstream consciousness almost immediately. News outlets in 160 countries covered the story within weeks of it going viral. Forbes ran a tongue-in-cheek defense calling the restoration "one woman's vision of her savior, uncompromised by schooling". *The Guardian*'s Jonathan Jones argued Giménez had achieved what no art professional could, bringing a virtually invisible work into global pop culture relevance.

The artistic group Wallpeople presented hundreds of reworked versions of the image on a wall near Barcelona's Centre de Cultura Contemporània in September 2012, with an organizer declaring "Cecilia has created a pop icon". Spanish actress Assumpta Serna co-produced the documentary *Fresco Fiasco* and acted in the film *Behold the Monkey*, both airing on Sky Arts in the UK in 2016.

The meme's most tangible legacy was economic. *The Cut* called Potato Jesus's tourism revival "the first known economic miracle performed by a meme". The revenue stream it created for Borja's elderly care system persisted for over a decade, funding real social services long after the initial viral wave subsided.

Full History

The immediate aftermath was brutal for Giménez. On August 23, 2012, Spanish newspaper *El Mundo* reported that the 81-year-old was bedridden with anxiety attacks, refusing to eat, and too afraid to leave her home due to media harassment and the flood of tourists descending on Borja. Neighbors told reporters they were trying to get her to eat as she had become "desganada" (listless) from the stress. The town initially considered legal action and even discussed closing the church to prevent further incidents.

But the story took an improbable turn. Instead of destroying Borja, Potato Jesus saved it. The church imposed a one-euro admission fee and collected upwards of €2,000 in just four days during the initial surge. Ryanair offered discounted €12 flights from surrounding cities to the nearest airport for meme tourists. By December 2014, the *New York Times* reported that 150,000 visitors had traveled to Borja to see the painting in person, each paying for the privilege.

The economic windfall was real. The admission revenue funded jobs for church caretakers and paid for places at Borja's care home for elderly residents who otherwise couldn't afford to live there. A full interpretation center dedicated to the artwork opened in March 2016. The €3 tickets generated over €40,000 annually, with roughly €15,000 going directly to fund spots for elderly residents in the town's retirement home.

Giménez's personal arc shifted too. She lawyered up and sought royalties from the church's new revenue stream. Her lawyer explained this wasn't opportunism; she wanted her share directed to muscular dystrophy charities because her son suffered from the condition. A 2013 agreement with the local council granted Giménez 49% of profits from all merchandise featuring her restoration, including T-shirts, mugs, keychains, magnets, teddy bears, mouse pads, and even Potato Jesus wine. She used much of the income for charitable donations.

The town's annual tourist numbers eventually settled from the initial explosion. By 2018, Borja was receiving about 16,000 visitors per year, still more than four times the pre-meme average. Mayor Eduardo Arilla acknowledged the meme's impact: "It was a media phenomenon, but it's also been a social phenomenon when it comes to helping people. If it hadn't happened, maybe Borja would have become famous for something else, like its wine".

Giménez herself found a second act. She held local art exhibitions, participated in events tied to her unexpected fame, and sold a painting at online auction for $1,400. She appeared in a music video, and in 2023, *Monkey Christ*, a comic opera telling a fictionalized version of her story, opened in Las Vegas. As the opera's librettist Andrew Flack put it, Giménez's story illustrated that "your disaster could be my miracle".

The Potato Jesus incident also kicked off a mini-genre of botched restoration memes. In 2018, a 16th-century wooden statue of St. George at a church in Estella, Spain, was given a makeover that left the saint looking like a cartoon character, drawing immediate comparisons to the Ecce Homo debacle.

Giménez died on December 29, 2025, at the age of 94. The Santuario de Misericordia described her as "a devoted mother and a fighter" and praised the affection she had gained worldwide. Borja's mayor paid tribute, noting she had been widowed while raising two children with disabilities. Speaking publicly in 2015, Giménez had reflected on her legacy with warmth: "Everyone here sees what I did in a different light. The restoration has put Borja on the world map, meaning I've done something for my village that nobody else was able to do".

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. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
  6. 6
  7. 7
  8. 8
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
    Ecce Homoarticle
  14. 14
  15. 15
  16. 16
  17. 17
  18. 18
  19. 19