Artur Lescher's work is present in contemporary Brazilian art with installations, sculptures and objects that occupy spaces with strength and fluidity. The procedures of suspension, submission and opposition of materials are present in most of the artist's works. To this end, he mainly uses wood and metal, creating large-scale installations of a geometric nature, in which the relationship with space is a determining factor. His sculptures, on the other hand, stand alone, bringing to light all the formal and material power of the artist's choices, where using diverse materials, such as metal, stone or wood, he creates works that evoke design and recall familiar objects, but devoid of their function.
His works are part of the collections of The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and Philadelphia Museum of Art (both in the USA), MALBA – Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires (Argentina), Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo, MAM – Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo, among others.
The artist participated in the 1987 and 2002 editions of the São Paulo Biennial and the 2005 edition of the Mercosul Biennial in Porto Alegre, Brazil, where he also served as curator. He has exhibited in several exhibitions in Latin America, Europe and the United States, in addition to two solo exhibitions, the first at the Tomie Ohtake Institute (2006), in São Paulo, and the second at the Palais d'Iéna (2017), in Paris. He recently exhibited at the Estação Pinacoteca, in São Paulo (2019), in addition to having solo exhibitions in several national and international galleries (including countries such as Mexico, Uruguay, France, Spain and the United States).
At the 19th São Paulo Biennial, Lescher presented the work "Aerólitos", an architectural work composed of two eleven-meter-long balloons. Later, the artist would deepen this research in works such as "Indoor Landscape" (2005), " Cachoeira" (2006), the series " Metamericos" and " Rio Máquina" (2009). The latter is a work that clearly denotes the relationship of tension proposed by the artist in many of his works: nature contained, worked, cleaned, transformed into an object of use, although, in this case, aesthetic.
Adolfo Montejo, in a text from 2009, concludes that “the last trap of these sculptures is, therefore, their paradoxical nature/form: a detained, still, yet vibrant appearance. The throbbing state that does not aim to be definitive, neither for them, nor for us”.