Born in Camaguey, Cuba in 1955, DEMI is one of the most critically acclaimed Cuban American artists working in the United States. She depicts a vibrant and intimate universe centered upon children, but hers is neither a sugar-coated nor an innocent vision. DEMI paints luminous and powerful children whose lives have been exposed to the vagaries of the adult world.
DEMI has first-hand knowledge of the plight of children whose fates are altered by devastating events. Her father was executed in Castro’s Cuba when DEMI was still a child. DEMI was sent to Puerto Rico to live with relatives at the age of six. She finally joined her family in the United States in 1971.
DEMI is a sobriquet to indicate her life was cut in half by exile, and she emphasizes individuality and ambiguity by avoiding the use of a last name. “I belong to a forgotten group: children of those executed in Cuba for political reasons,” the artist states. “Sons and daughters still too young of age to understand why we were confronted with death, separation and loneliness. My paintings blossom from the inner depths of those childhood memories.”
In 1978 at a gallery opening, DEMI met Arturo Rodriguez, a gifted Cuban-American painter, who was to become her partner in life and in art. Rodriguez was DEMI’s first teacher, as well as a tremendous intellectual and cultural influence. The two were married in 1984 and continue to live and work in Miami.

Credit photo to Ramon Guerrero, Demi on a sofa, 1987 Gelatin silver print, 24×18, Private Collection