See Class.newInstance().
For example:
List<Class> blockArray = new ArrayList<Class>();
blockArray.add(LTetrino.class);
// then instantiate an object of the class that was just added
LTetrino block = blockArray.get(0).newInstance();
If your class constructor takes parameters, you can use the getConstructor() method of Class to retrieve the appropriate Constructor, and invoke that instead (it's linked in the docs above), e.g. (assuming LTetrino is a static / top level class and that its constructor takes two int parameters):
Class<? extends LTetrino> cls = blockArray.get(0);
// get constructor
Constructor<? extends LTetrino> ctor = cls.getConstructor(int.class, int.class);
// instantiate by invoking constructor
LTetrino block = ctor.newInstance(x, y);
By the way, I recommend not using a generic type for Class:
List<Class<? extends LTetrino>> blockArray = new ArrayList<Class<? extends LTetrino>>();
blockArray.add(LTetrino.class);
Or at the minimum:
List<Class<?>> blockArray = new ArrayList<Class<?>>();
blockArray.add(LTetrino.class);