![Juan Gris - Fantômas ;1915]](http://farm1.staticflickr.com/733/22442475012_48dcfc205c_o.png)
Originally trained in math and physics, Juan Gris moved to Paris in 1906, where he met Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque and became involved in the Cubist movement. Gris took a highly mathematical approach to Cubist painting, rendering discrete forms with precision and exactitude, the resulting images almost resembling technical drawings. The composition of Jar, Flask, and Glass (1911), for example, was derived from an underlying grid structure, the different modules depicting different planar perspectives and yielding an overall composition that is both fractured and flattened.
[National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. - Oil on canvas, 59.8 × 73.3 cm]