• “This rectangle, shattered, we have swallowed it, absorbed it. To demolish the plane as a support for expression is to become aware of unity as a living and organic whole.”

    Baró Paris presents Lygia Clark: Anatomie d’une ligne, the second exhibition dedicated to the Brazilian artist by Baró Galeria and the inaugural exhibition of its new permanent space in Paris. Curated by Rolando J. Carmona, the exhibition focuses on key moments in Lygia Clark’s practice, examining the relationship between geometric abstraction, the body, and psychoanalysis. The presentation brings together studies, photographs, cardboard maquettes produced in the 1950s, and Bicho Desfolhado (579), highlighting a decisive phase in the artist’s transition from geometric structures to participatory propositions.

     

    A significant part of the works and propositions presented in the exhibition were conceived during Lygia Clark’s time in Paris. Between 1950 and 1952, she studied in the city with Isaac Dobrinsky, Fernand Léger, and Arpad Szenes, and later returned to Paris in self exile during the Brazilian military dictatorship. From 1968 to 1976, Clark developed an intensive body of work that integrated psychoanalytic thinking into her artistic practice.

    During this period, Clark was invited to teach a course on gestural communication at the Sorbonne, where she developed the series of propositions known as Corpo coletivo. Works such as Baba Antropofágica and La Red, also presented in this exhibition, emerged from these experiences. In La Red, the modern grid is destabilized and transformed into a flexible structure activated by collective bodily interaction.

    At its Paris location, Baró Galeria develops a program that brings together historical works and emerging artists from the Global South. The opening exhibition dedicated to Lygia Clark positions the Paris space within an international dialogue between historical practices and contemporary artistic research.

    Lygia Clark was born in 1920 in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, and became a central figure of the Neo Concrete movement in the late 1950s. Her work is included in major international collections, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Tate in London, Centre Pompidou in Paris, and Museo Reina Sofía in Madrid. Recent institutional exhibitions include a major retrospective at the Nationalgalerie in Berlin, currently traveling to Kunsthaus Zürich.

    • Lygia Clark Study for Bicho, 1960 Adhesive tape and balsa wood 27.5 x 19.5 cm
      Lygia Clark
      Study for Bicho, 1960
      Adhesive tape and balsa wood
      27.5 x 19.5 cm
    • Lygia Clark Study for Espaço Modulado, 1958 Cardboard collage 30 x 10 cm
      Lygia Clark
      Study for Espaço Modulado, 1958
      Cardboard collage
      30 x 10 cm
    • Lygia Clark Study for Espaço Modulado, 1958 Cardboard collage 30 x 10 cm
      Lygia Clark
      Study for Espaço Modulado, 1958
      Cardboard collage
      30 x 10 cm
    • Lygia Clark Study for Espaço Modulado, 1958 Cardboard collage 30 x 10 cm
      Lygia Clark
      Study for Espaço Modulado, 1958
      Cardboard collage
      30 x 10 cm
    • Lygia Clark Study for Espaço Modulado, 1958 Cardboard collage 10.2 x 10 cm
      Lygia Clark
      Study for Espaço Modulado, 1958
      Cardboard collage
      10.2 x 10 cm
    • Lygia Clark Study for Planos em Superfície Modulada, 1957 Cardboard collage 20.2 x 30.7 cm
      Lygia Clark
      Study for Planos em Superfície Modulada, 1957
      Cardboard collage
      20.2 x 30.7 cm
    • Lygia Clark Study for Planos em Superfície Modulada, 1957 Cardboard collage 19.6 x 30.7 cm
      Lygia Clark
      Study for Planos em Superfície Modulada, 1957
      Cardboard collage
      19.6 x 30.7 cm
    • Lygia Clark Study for Planos em Superfície Modulada, 1957 Cardboard collage 20.2 x 30.5 cm
      Lygia Clark
      Study for Planos em Superfície Modulada, 1957
      Cardboard collage
      20.2 x 30.5 cm
    • Lygia Clark Study for Planos em Superfície Modulada, 1957 Cardboard collage 20 x 30.6 cm
      Lygia Clark
      Study for Planos em Superfície Modulada, 1957
      Cardboard collage
      20 x 30.6 cm