Marina Tito was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on the winter solstice of 1972. She began oil painting at the age of six at the Atelier Paul Klee. Her early talent earned her one gold and two silver medals over three consecutive years at the Shankar's International Children's Competition in India, setting the tone for her lifelong artistic journey.

At eleven, Marina joined a local still life master painter's atelier. By fourteen, after relocating to New Jersey, she concentrated on photography, sculpture, and graphic design, leading her high school’s art magazine and attending the Fashion Institute of Technology for photography and graphic design during summers. She received her high school’s art scholarship and a scholarship for communications from the School of Visual Arts, embarking on a 30-year career as a designer, illustrator, writer, and creative director.

Marina worked with design studios and advertising agencies in New York City, Vienna, and South Florida, handling accounts such as Colgate Palmolive, Procter & Gamble, Sony, Volvo, Minolta, R.J. Reynolds, Beefeater, Pfizer, and more. In 2000, she founded her own studio, designing for The Breakers Hotel in Palm Beach and re-launching the Invicta Watch Brand, which became her focus for the next thirteen years.

Throughout her career, Marina continued to explore new media in her paintings. Her series "Echo" is displayed at Echo, The Breakers Hotel’s first off-premises restaurant, conceived and designed by Marina. Her paintings, part of The Breakers Hotel collection, have adorned its walls since its launch in 2000.

In 2008, while training for her private pilot license, Marina met Florentine pilot and designer Lorenzo Di Alessandro. After five years of collaborative design projects, they launched GOOD PUPPY - Books For Growing Good Kids. This initiative evolved into the GOOD PUPPY Children Behavioral System, created with her brother, family therapist Gabriel Tito. This system offers empathetic tools for children ages 3 to 9 and is curated for home, school, and therapy.

Inspired by her years in digital design, Marina explored photo collage in her series “The Way” and “Trigger Icons,” and digital design in “Stack The Deck” and “Geometric Resonance.” Always a fan of oil painting, Marina created a whimsical cat collection named “Pepi” and a sober, highly symbolic series in black, white, and silver oils called “Deus Ex Machina,” where she explores the ascension of consciousness as an automated soul program embedded in our bodies.