The DC artist tells Gary evans how his career began with an epiphany during a physical education exam
Jorge Jiménez was in the third year of his physical education degree, and it was exam time. The Spaniard studied hard. He felt ready. Then something weird happened. He looked around and saw how his classmates seemed really motivated by what they were doing. He didn’t have that. Sitting there in the classroom that day, Jorge had a bit of epiphany, a quiet little moment of revelation.
“I felt a bit out of place,” Jorge says, “and, suddenly, it was as if my eyes were opened, and I thought: ‘I am not this. Here, I’m just making up the numbers. I’m a cartoonist, and I’ve always been a cartoonist!’” There was just one problem. Jorge hadn’t drawn anything for years…
He grew up on the outskirts of Cádiar, a small mountainous village in the Granada region of southern Spain. His brothers were much older, so Jorge spent a lot of time alone. The one thing he always had was his drawing. His mother encouraged him. She made sure he had plenty of paper, oils, pencils and watercolours. But she challenged him, too. Jorge liked to sketch the cartoons he was waiting on TV. But his mother told him: watch first, draw later. This forced him to work from memory.
When he got a bit older, his parents signed him up for painting classes at a local art school. Because Jorge had always drawn freely, he found it frustrating when, during a still life class, a “bad art teacher” tried to force him to learn the measuring technique, where the artist holds out a pencil and squints at his subject.
“All the magic of drawing disappeared doing this and so, after a few days, I stopped attending class, and I promised that I wouldn’t dedicate myself to drawing. If this was the price of living to draw, I didn’t want that.”
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Denne historien er fra June 2019-utgaven av ImagineFX.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
XPPen Artist Pro 19 (Gen 2)
Whether you’re a pro artist or a passionate hobbyist, this pen display offers something for everyone with beautiful colour and accurate drawing
First Impressions
The artists explains how her imagination for fantasy was born
DRAW VIBRANT CHARACTER ART
LIDIA CAMBON reveals her step-by-step process for creating a full-body illustration from first sketch to vibrant, cohesive colour with markers
Photoshop & Blender: BUILD NARRATIVE USING INTERIORS
Find out how illustrator Magdalina Dianova creates a cosy setting that helps to express her character’s personality
Blender, Procreate & Photoshop DESIGN CREEPY ARCHITECTURE
Nick Stath explains how he built an eerie, atmospheric environment for the sci-fi horrors of Alien: Romulus
Photoshop - PAINT FAN ART WITH EMOTION
Baptiste Boutié goes in-depth on his approach for creating visual appeal in a tribute to Tekkonkinkreet
ZBrush, KeyShot & Photoshop - CRAFT A HIDEOUS ALIEN NIGHTMARE
Follow along as character and creature artist Kyle Brown makes xenomorph fan art inspired by Alien: Romulus
FEARFUL VISIONS
ImagineFX explores the visual heritage of the visceral Alien cosmos and its develooment over the franchise's history
Mike Butkus
Surf's up! Why coastal comforts lured the artist to his California home
The art behind Alien: Romulus
Xenomorphology Tanya Combrinck meets the Alien-obsessed concept artists who revived the visual style of the classic films