Giolla

Jora is a member of the Donquixote Pirates' Trébol Army.

Appearance


Jora is a very large woman, with exaggerated facial features, a plump upper body and very skinny legs. She wears a pink dress, with yellow flowers on it, and has a pink bead necklace. Her green hair, large cheekbones, heavy make-up, and pink pointed glasses accentuate her face.

Personality
Jora is quite full of herself, and has a habit of mishearing what her adversaries say to her as compliments, such as being referred to as a mermaid princess and a model, and then berating them for calling her such when they said no such thing to begin with. She is very passionate about art and her ability to bring her visions to life. However, her passion for the arts seems to somewhat cloud her judgment, as Brook was able to fool her into undoing the transformation on his violin and sword-cane by telling her that he also was an artist and that he wanted to play music in tandem with her art.

Donquixote Pirates
Jora is loyal to the Donquixote Pirates, serving under her young master, and under the Trébol Army. She seems to be good friends with Lao G, as the two of them are often seen playing cards together, though the two of them were irritated by Baby 5's rash habit of accepting every marriage proposal made to her.

As with the rest of the crew, she felt that the traitorous Trafalgar Law should be punished with death.

Devil Fruit


Jora ate the Ato Ato no Mi, a Paramecia-class Devil Fruit that allows her to alter the shape and appearance of any object, including living organisms, into whatever she wishes, making it into distorted, abstract art. Any weapon or vehicle that has been warped by this ability loses their functionality. She used this ability to sabotage the Thousand Sunny and prevented the Straw Hats from leaving.

She pictures the art in her mind and then a thought cloud appears above her head which she throws at the object, which becomes art upon contact with the cloud.

Punk Hazard Arc
Jora first appeared on Dressrosa, playing cards with Lao G while Doflamingo talked on the phone with Vergo and Caesar. When a girl told her that Doflamingo was not in his room, Jora concluded that he must have left the island.

Dressrosa Arc


She was seen again playing cards with Lao G, when Baby 5 tried to find Trébol. She got annoyed when Baby 5 accepted Trébol's proposal to her.

The group guarding the ship then heard her going through the mens' quarters, searching for something. She then assaulted the Thousand Sunny and transformed Nami, Chopper, Brook, Momonosuke, and the ship into abstract forms of art. She was also ordered to kidnap Momonosuke by Doflamingo but initially failed to recognize Momonosuke's dragon form. Nami's group managed to escape the ship, but once Jora saw Momonosuke with them, she demanded that they the boy over.

Nami, Brook, and Chopper fought back and managed to defeat Jora's men and destroy her ship. Jora then used her Devil Fruit powers to render any further resistance useless.



Jora later trapped Chopper, Momonosuke, and Nami in a deadly painting that was going slowly suffocate them within ten minutes. Brook acted nonchalant, seemingly caring more about the art that was being created than his friends' lives. The skeleton asked Jora to turn his violin and cane back to normal so that he could add accompaniment to their death. Once Jora complied, Brook slashed her using Ekakiuta: Hitoyogiri. This knocked her out, which turned the group back to normal.



Later she was seen defeated by the Straw Hats. When they started discussing about Law's plans, she proudly told them that her master, Doflamingo, would never really quit the Shichibukai and explained to them the situation. That left the crew shocked and worried.

Major Battles

 * Jora vs. Nami, Tony Tony Chopper, and Brook
 * Jora vs. Brook
 * Jora vs. Nami, Brook, Chopper and Momonosuke

Trivia

 * She is the second person to use her Devil Fruit powers for "art", the first being Galdino.
 * The shape of her artistic transformations is mainly inspired by the work of famous painters Salvador Dalí and Pablo Picasso.