Décio Pignatari (August 20, 1927 – December 2, 2012) was a Brazilian poet, essayist and translator.
[1] Born in Jundiaí in 1927, Pignatari began conducting experiments with poetic language, incorporating visuals elements and the fragmentation of words in the 1950s.
Such verbal adventures culminated in concretism, aesthetic movement that he co-founded with Augusto and Haroldo de Campos, with whom he edited the journals Noigandres and Invention and published the Theory of Concrete Poetry (1965).
[1] Pignatari published translations of Dante Alighieri, Goethe and Shakespeare,[1] among others, gathered in Portrait of Love when Young (1990) and 231 poems.
He also published a volume of stories The Face of Memory (1988) and the novel Panteros (1992), as well as a work for theater, Céu de Lona (Sailcloth Sky).