Rina Lazo was born in Guatemala City. While attending the Academy of Fine Arts in Guatemala, she won a scholarship to study painting in Mexico. Rina attended La Esmerelda School of Painting and Sculpture, where faculty members included Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo.
She mastered engraving techniques under Leopoldo Mendez, Pablo O'Higgins and her future husband, Arturo García Bustos, while assisting at the Taller de Grafica Popular.
Diego once wrote, "Rina Lazo, a painter of great talent. My beloved friend, my right hand... the best of my assistants." Rivera also stated that Rina possessed a manner "that allowed her to collaborate with me to the point that later, I could not distinguish, on my own fresco, the areas that I had painted..."
Murals by Rina are on public display throughout Mexico and Guatemala. In 1948, she painted the mural, Zapata, at the Primary School in Morelos. The following year, she completed The Four Elements in Mexico City. In 1953, Rina painted the fresco Tierra Fertil at the Museum of the University of San Carlos of Guatemala.
Her work is part of permanent collections in Mexico, including the University of Contemporary Art and the Museum of the State of Mexico; and in Guatemala, at the University Museum of San Carlos and the Museum of Modern Art. She has participated in numerous exhibitions, individually as well as collectively.
In addition to the scholarship that brought her to Mexico, Rina has received many awards throughout her career. Among the more prominent is the medal and diploma "Maestro Rafael Ramirez" awarded in appreciation of her 30 years of service to the city, as instructor at the National Institute of the Fine Arts. In 1988, she received a certificate of recognition from the Secretariat of Public Education that read, "To Rina Lazo, whose life and work is a source of pride for Mexico and an example for the new generations."
Rina continues to pass on the benefit of her vast experience, both artistic and historical, to students who will some day recount stories to their students about her talent, kindness and contributions to the enrichment of the Mexican culture and its people.