Paulo Roberto Leal
Linhas Entretela, 1975
Acrylic on sewn canvas
In Linhas Entretela (1975), Paulo Roberto Leal explores the boundary between painting and object through the subtle interplay of line, material, and surface. Executed on sewn canvas, the work reflects Leal’s pioneering investigations into the physicality of painting—a hallmark of Brazilian constructive and neoconcrete traditions.
The artist’s use of thread and structural interventions transforms the canvas into a site of tension and tactility. Rather than serving as a passive support, the surface becomes activated—stitched, shaped, and marked—revealing an architecture of gesture and restraint. Leal’s minimalist palette allows the work's materiality and form to speak with clarity and nuance.
Paulo Roberto Leal (1946–1991)
Was a key figure in post-neoconcrete Brazilian art, recognized for his investigations into the structure of painting and the language of abstraction. Born in Rio de Janeiro, he was associated with the generation that expanded the legacy of the neoconcrete movement into new conceptual and material territories.
Leal’s work frequently engages with the architecture of the pictorial plane—cutting, folding, sewing, and assembling surfaces in ways that challenge the conventions of traditional painting. His practice is marked by rigor, subtlety, and a poetic sensibility that aligns with the radical formalism of artists such as Lygia Clark and Hélio Oiticica, yet retains a voice distinctly his own.
His work is part of major Brazilian collections and has been featured in key exhibitions that map the evolution of Brazilian abstraction in the 20th century.
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