In the illustrations of Chubby Nida, fragility, irony, and a sensitivity entirely her own coexist, made up of small emotions that take shape through suspended characters and intimate scenes. Her illustrations and animations seem to emerge from everyday moments that are hard to define, light yet persistent feelings that turn into images capable of expressing universal states of mind.

Chubby Nida’s visual language is constantly evolving. For her, technique is never a fixed starting point, but rather a choice that must adapt to the message. This is why she works with different materials — from gouache to oil pastels, from collage to digital tools — allowing each project to find its own form. This fluid approach is reflected in a diverse body of work, where each piece maintains its own identity while remaining coherent with her visual world.


At the center of her work there is often a delicate and introspective emotional dimension. Her pieces explore themes such as mental health, inner landscapes, and the relationship between personal memory and external influences, building visual narratives made of minimal details and suspended atmospheres. The scenes she creates are quiet, almost intimate, like small fragments of life that invite the viewer to see themselves within them.

Many of her personal projects begin with feelings that are difficult to explain, emotions that linger in the background and do not disappear. Sometimes they are awkward moments, sometimes ironic ones, and other times they are simply persistent. Instead of translating them into words, Chubby Nida turns them into images, building quiet scenes that express what often remains unspoken.

The result is a body of work that moves between lightness and introspection, where the apparent simplicity of the forms conceals a subtle emotional depth. Chubby Nida’s illustrations do not try to explain, but rather to suggest, leaving room for personal interpretation and for that familiar feeling that arises when an image manages to express something we have felt, but did not know how to put into words.


