Paul Czanne was highly revered by not just his contemporaries (although this took some time to materialize), but also the 2th- and 21st-century artists that were to follow him. Perhaps this is because his paintings and great works were universal and easy to interpret, with monumental great landscapes, still life, and portraitures, or perhaps it is because he brought something fresh, exciting, and new. Described as the Father of Modernism, Cezannes style and influences changed from his early darker palettes to colorful and vibrant pieces, largely owing to his association with fellow artist Camille Pissarro. The paintings from the 187s developed through Impressionism still widely regarded as one of the greatest movements in the art world to his later works into the 2th century, with their foundations firmly and geometrically routed in Cubism. He lived and worked through a time when Impressionism was in its heyday, and he often used these techniques, but he is more often than not considered a Post-Impressionist. He had a firm belief that everything in existence could be formed using cylinders, cones, and spheres geometrical shapes would play a huge part in his development as a leading artist and would point toward a Cubist movement. It took almost all of the 45 years of Cezannes career for him to achieve the recognition and acclaimed criticism that he deserved, but it came around 19, just six years before his death, leaving the French artist with an enduring legacy and a prominent place in art history.