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John Locke
Paul Cézanne
Sounds like Paul Cézanne, although he was not an impressionist in the strict sense of the term.
George Danton was a lawyer before the French Revolution then he became a leader of the French Revolution.
1890 when he was 21. He became ill and his mother, to cheer him up, brought him paints where he discovered his love and passion for art. He dropped law school, which he was formally participating in to become a lawyer, and became an internationally known artist. This upset his father because his father always wanted him to be a lawyer.
"The Lawyer" means 'l'avocat' or 'le notaire' in French. In the French language, un "avocat" is a French lawyer but it is also a fruit (avocado). Beware of the confusion! ...
25 when he became a lawyer, 57 when he became president
Vincent van Gogh was the son of a Protestant Minister in Holland. Vincent believed he had a religious calling and worked as a missionary in the slums of London and the mining districts of Belgium.
In French, you can call a lawyer by saying "avocat" for a male lawyer or "avocate" for a female lawyer.
John A Macdonald became a Lawyer at the age of 20.
First as a lawyer, then as an artist.
became a lawyer