AMERICAS

Brazilian Modernist Portinari and Matisse Heist Shocks São Paulo Library

When thieves walked out of São Paulo’s Biblioteca Mário de Andrade with engravings by Brazilian modernist Portinari and Matisse, they stole more than paper; they grabbed pieces of Brazil’s working-class memory and Europe’s canon in one hurried sack that day. 

Library Heist In The Heart Of São Paulo 

On an ordinary Sunday morning in central São Paulo, two armed men walked through the main entrance of Biblioteca Mário de Andrade, the country’s second-largest library, at around 10:00 local time. They were not there for books. According to officials, they confronted a security guard and an elderly couple visiting the building, then headed straight for a temporary exhibition, “From Book to Museum”, a joint project with the São Paulo Museum of Modern Art. Within minutes, eight engravings by Henri Matisse and at least five by Cândido Portinari were gone. The men left the same way they came, slipping toward the nearest metro station, apparently on foot. 

By Monday, authorities had already found what they called the “escape vehicle” and announced the arrest of one suspect after combing through images from the library’s cameras and the city’s extensive surveillance network, which includes facial recognition technology downtown. Brazilian news site G1 released footage that appeared to show two men running along a street, carrying between them a bulging sack that could easily hide flat, framed works. The crime comes less than two months after a brazen jewel robbery at the Louvre in Paris, raising inevitable questions about how cultural institutions, from European palaces to Latin American libraries, are racing to protect treasures in an age of opportunistic, often heavily armed thieves. 

Officials have yet to publish a full list of works taken, but the newspaper Folha de S. Paulo reports that at least one of the stolen Matisse pieces is a collage created for the limited-edition art book “Jazz”, one of the twentieth century’s most celebrated explorations of color and form. Critics quickly labeled the monetary value of the haul “incalculable,” an art-market reflex that says little about what the theft means to the country that hosted the show. For Brazil, the more intimate wound lies with the missing Portinari engravings, created to illustrate a special edition of “Menino de engenho (Plantation Boy)” by José Lins do Rego, a novel that excavates the violence and nostalgia of sugarcane plantations in the northeast. 

Close-up of Portinari, half-length, with his jars of brushes in the background. Rio de Janeiro. Courtesy/Francesco Florian Steiner

Portinari’s Red Earth And The Workers On The Page 

To understand why those Portinari engravings matter, it helps to return to December 29, 1903, when Candido Portinari was born on a coffee plantation near Brodowski, in São Paulo state. The son of Italian immigrants Giovan Battista Portinari and Domenica Torquato, he grew up among rows of coffee trees, in a landscape he would later describe as red earth under an enormous blue sky. That chromatic memory—the browns and reds of soil, the thick blues of Brazilian light—would seep into his canvases for decades. 

Before anyone in museums knew his name, the young Portinari worked painting over photographs, painstakingly reproducing and enlarging images so precisely that the resemblance itself became a kind of spectacle. He then entered the Escola Nacional de Belas Artes in Rio de Janeiro, winning prizes at the official Salon in 1923, 1925, and 1927. In 1928, he received a government scholarship to study in Europe for three years. There he painted little, but studied obsessively: he walked through museums, absorbed the lessons of the European avant-gardes, and met his future wife, Maria Martinelli. When he returned to Brazil, he did so with a decision that would define his career: to paint the country “naked and crude as it is,” siding with the workers and children he knew rather than the imported tastes of elites. 

The engravings taken from Biblioteca Mário de Andrade sit inside that decision. Created for “Menino de engenho”, they bring the plantation world of José Lins do Rego into dialogue with Portinari’s own childhood in the coffee rows. As scholars of Brazilian modernism have noted in journals such as Art Journal and Latin American Research Review, Portinari differed from contemporaries like Lasar Segall and Tarsila do Amaral, whose workers sometimes appeared as anonymous masses. In paintings like “O Mulato”, “Café”, “Meninos de Brodowski” and “The Mestizo”, he gave laborers oversized hands and feet, proud postures and clear faces—figures that look strong, competent, unbroken. The plantation boy is not a symbol to be dissolved into pattern; he is an individual whose dignity refuses to disappear. 

That same human emphasis runs through Portinari’s monumental work. Over his lifetime, he produced more than 5,000 pieces, from small studies to vast murals. Between 1952 and 1956, he created the twin panels “Guerra e Paz (War and Peace)”, donated to the United Nations Headquarters and later praised by Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld as one of the most important works gifted to the institution. In “War”, blue shadows wrap tightly around bodies contorted by fear and grief; in “Peace”, lighter yellows and open poses suggest a fragile but possible harmony. Together, they are, in the words of critics, a synthesis of a life committed to exposing injustice, violence, and misery—and imagining a world beyond them.

The work “The Clown” by Matisse, one of the pieces stolen from the Mário de Andrade Library — Photo: Reproduction/YouTube/MAM

Art Theft, Inequality And The Hunger For Icons 

The engravings stolen in São Paulo are smaller than “Guerra e Paz”, but they belong to the same project: to show, without cosmetic gloss, the Brazil of poor housing, scant schooling, precarious health and relentless work. In “Café” and “Cocoa”, Portinari painted coffee and cacao workers with enlarged limbs and compact bodies, sometimes including children balancing crates on their heads, to insist that rural labor in Brazil was a family affair, rooted in land but bent by exploitation. He used blues, reds and oranges in a visual vocabulary tied to the very soil he called himself the “son” of. 

That biography makes the São Paulo theft feel less like a luxury crime and more like a familiar story: the memory of workers removed once again, this time from a public library meant to safeguard the country’s cultural record. It is not the first time. On December 20, 2007, Portinari’s “O Lavrador de Café” was stolen from the São Paulo Museum of Art alongside Pablo Picasso’s “Portrait of Suzanne Bloch”. Both were recovered by police in Ferraz de Vasconcelos in January 2008, undamaged, but the episode underlined how Brazilian modernism, long treated as peripheral to Europe’s canon, had become a desirable target on the global black market. 

There is a painful irony in the fact that a man who died in 1962 from complications linked to lead poisoning in his paints—after ignoring medical warnings so he could continue working—now has his images lifted from institutions that finally recognize his importance. His career intersected with architects like Oscar Niemeyer, his murals stretch from a family chapel in Brodowski to the Hispanic Reading Room of the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., and his face once appeared on a 1989 Brazilian banknote. His legacy has been preserved by Projeto Portinari, launched in 1979 by his son João Candido Portinari, which catalogued thousands of paintings, drawings and documents and helped organize retrospectives at the Museu de Arte de São Paulo (MASP)

Set against Matisse, whose engravings for “Jazz” are firmly enshrined in global art history, Portinari’s loss feels different in Brazil. One is a pillar of the European twentieth century; the other is the painter who convinced generations of Brazilians that their own lives—on plantations, in favelas, in small interior towns—were worthy of monumental art. When thieves tore pages of “Menino de engenho” from the walls of Biblioteca Mário de Andrade, they did not just snatch assets. They momentarily severed a line connecting a boy born on red earth in 1903 to readers, students and workers walking through São Paulo in 2025, looking for themselves in a library that sits at the heart of their city.

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