Answers:
It depends on the school and the program, but so long as it's a bachelor's degree from an appropriately accredited university, you should be fine. But make sure that, if employers in the US require any particular sort of professional accreditation of CG programs, like they do for engineering programs, that your school's program has it.
Know that most Americans won't have heard of your university, so you may need to put a line on your resume like the example that follows:
University de Impreza, Colima, Mexico. Bachelor of Arts, Computer Graphics, GPA 3.97.
- Impreza is the #1 program for Computer Graphics in Mexico, and is ranked in the top 10 for all of North America...
Something like that, to put the school in context, may be of help.
Some employers may also ask that you get your educational credentials evaluated by a reliable credentials evaluation service specializing in evaluating foreign documentation.
I am not aware of any requirement that one graduate from an accredited university to work in computer graphics anywhere in the world.
A friend of mine dropped out of college (years and years ago) and later worked at Honeywell programming their mainframe computers.
My son-in-law taught himself rudimentary computer networking, went to Microsoft and Novell seminars and studied and now runs a school technology department with over 2,000 computers even though he dropped out of high school.
It isn't often that one can do that, but if you can learn technology, there is a job somewhere, regardless of how you learned.
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