
Growing up running along Mount Teide and throwing stones into the Marne River, Jeunepie became naturally bilingual and multilingual by osmosis. She studied Audiovisual Communication and Philosophy, but focused her career on Graphic Design. Over time, she rediscovered her passion for different artistic techniques of expression such as drawing and collage, and decided to focus professionally on Digital Illustration.
Her work is figurative, narrative, and poetic. Animal nature and the use of characters combined with the photographs she takes herself are her favorite tools to tell stories. The clash between tradition and minimalism is her great source of inspiration.
Having a figurative and narrative style allows her illustrations to work well in various media, such as advertisements, covers, posters, magazines, and any type of publication or product that requires the use of images to convey ideas or messages visually.
For Jeunepie, creating is less about producing images and more about questioning the act of seeing itself. She perceives digital illustration as a mirror of human contradictions: intimate yet universal, fragile yet bold, simple yet layered with meaning. Her creative process is guided by observation and irony — a way of exposing the invisible ties between reality and imagination. Each piece becomes not only an aesthetic proposal but also a reflection on how stories, symbols, and beauty shape the way we understand the world.