Her father was a Mexican senator and friend of Carlos Chávez, the director of the Palacio de Bellas Artes.
[3] This allowed her to earn a quality education, receiving a bachelor's and master's degree in Mexican history from the Universidad Nacional de México.
[1][4] She published notable books on artists such as Diego Rivera, Manuel Rodríguez Lozano, Vladimir Cora, Leopoldo Flores, Gogy Farías and Antonio Ramírez, as well as Estética del arte mexicano en el tiempo in 2006.
[1] She has stated that Mexican art “constitutes a singular and unique phenomenon, owing to a mixture of traces and elements that bring together an idea of an original cohesion, created by the qualities of monument, and rich imagination.
Form, line, color, fantasy and meaning are woven to define an idea of art with particular traits.”[3] In 2009, the Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México held a tribute to her life's work.