Born in San Luis Potosi, Mexico, she was surrounded by her family of artists and friends who loved and love the arts. She began her studies at the Fine Arts Instituto Potosi, where she received her teaching certificate in basic painting in 1980. During this time she participated in several workshops and exhibitions for lithography. As a graduate she was free to experiment and play with many media before deciding that oil painting was her favorite. For a short time she lived in Mexico City, where she had the good fortune to be admitted to the printmaking workshop at the School of San Carlos. Back in San Luis Potosi in 1986, she was commissioned for 9 floor sculptures in Egyptian design for a local hotel. The following year she received a commission on behalf of the Mexican community for an oil painting of the Virgin of Guadalupe for the church of Mount Caramel in Chicago. It was then that she discovered her love of painting religious subjects. In 1991 she married Michael Pammler and moved to Springdale, a small town in eastern Washington, USA. For the next 19 years she continued to develop her own approach to the Virgin of Guadalupe and icons. She also continued work with portrait and landscape, “creating memories of my husband and our time here”. She started experimenting with recycled metal for the construction of sculpture with floral themes. This digression brought a variety of other projects, including stained glass, leaded bottles, garden sculptures, and many old metal "things" painted and decorated. This was in contrast to her classical paintings however, revealing another hidden self, over time filling her home and garden studio with paintings and projects. In October 2010 they returned to SLP Mexico. She was invited by the city to join her sister-in-law in a special exhibition of works with religious themes at the Palacio del Ayuntamiento for the celebration of Easter Holy Week.