About
Hi! I’m Fernando Sica Minguillón, an illustrator and visual artist from Mexico City. For as long as I can remember, my sketchbook has been a battlefield for dinosaurs, aliens, and Knights of the Zodiac.
I studied Graphic Design, and since graduating in 2008, I’ve worked as a freelancer on a wide range of projects, from brand identity and web design to editorial illustration for Palacio de Hierro and magazines like Chilango, GQ, and Vanity Fair. I’ve also collaborated on cultural projects for SECTUR, CEIDAS, and Conaculta.
My analog and digital work blends the spirit of the '80s and '90s with an urban aesthetic. Drawing inspiration from childhood cartoons and subtly incorporating elements of Asian cultures, I create portraits, magical deities, and street characters.
For a time, I created motion graphics at animation studios Llamarada and Flaminguettes for museum installations and commercial projects. This allowed me to experiment across disciplines before launching my personal project, Rimiyoho.
Rimiyoho is the culmination of everything I love, illustration, animation, and projection brought together in a live drawing performance. By working closely with musicians, I transform any space into a canvas for digital art, taking drawing into new formats like projection mapping and real-time stage visuals.
As Rimiyoho, I have worked with brands such as Adidas, Porsche, BMW, Uber, Stella Artois, and Pepsi. My performances have taken me across the globe to Germany, China, Taiwan, Canada, and the United States.
I have participated in festivals and venues, including Mutek Montreal, Mutek Mexico, the ZKM Center for Art and Media in Germany, the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago, the National Taichung Theater in Taiwan, and projects in Tianjin, China. Within Mexico, I’ve showcased my work at León Light Fest, Vitae Fest, Filux, and the International Festivals of Chihuahua, Puebla, and Quimera.
Through Rimiyoho, I explore a different aesthetic, painting organic mandalas, botanical-inspired fantasy gardens, abstract compositions, and giant creatures like jellyfish and undersea landscapes that temporarily inhabit buildings and public spaces.

