Márquez Huitzil’s first exhibition was in 1978, where she showcased a series of mermaids at the Salón de Pintura organized by
Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes. Of the artistic generation of
Roberto Turnbull, Boris Viskin,
Luciano Spano,
Laura Anderson, Renato González and Gustavo Monroy, her very early work is comparable to that to and . Violence was a theme in her collage work, which consisted of black-and-white photographs she took and integrated with ink drawings,
sfumatos,
gouaches and crayon. She also created engravings of the female body. Often these were fat and or missing arms and legs to represent the difficult role women have in society, especially in traditional cultures. Although best known for her painting, she has had more commercial success with video, performance art and installations. Her work over her career has been in painting and engraving along with making sculptures from wire. Her work evolved from figurative to more abstract in the 1990s, created large-scale works often with atmospheric and oceanic themes in which human or divine figures sometimes appear. She also creates immensely sized landscapes. She values memory, fantasy and dreaming, along with
Aztec and Nahua cosmology. Recurring themes include mermaids, Nahua mythology, Greek goddesses in Mesoamerican landscapes, Mexican folk masks (especially those of the state of
Guerrero),
Gothic architecture and dark feminine shapes. The feminine is often represented with images of the moon, the earth, pearls, the womb, darkness and images related to unconsciousness. Most of her work uses strong colors, but they are mixed with care. Her tendency to combine figurative elements with abstractionism is somewhat controversial, and has led her to be excluded from events and listing related to Mexican abstractionism. Despite the addition of figurative elements, Márquez Huitzil still considers her work to be abstract as there are large swaths of color, which have their own message. Art critic
Teresa del Conde describes her abstract work as having "apparitions," with "figures planted in them". ==References==