Person who engages in patronage.
Sinônimos
Examples for "patron of the arts"
Examples for "patron of the arts"
1Builder, political governor, religious propagandist, reformer, patron of the arts and science.
2The BBC has a long-standing commitment as a patron of the arts.
3In her later years, Carla Fendi became a well-known patron of the arts.
4Yes, but for all his faults, he was a great patron of the arts.
5Bettini was an intimate friend of Buonarroti and a considerable patron of the arts.
1I wondered if you were related to the art patron Gertrude Sheldon.
2The general art patron in England is a brewer or distiller.
3The resulting noggins are realistic enough to give the most sharp-eyed art patron pause.
4She didn't want to be pegged as an art patron, not in her current guise.
5Why will the art patron never take advice?
1Tame Iti and arts patron Jenny Gibbs were eventually able to negotiate its return more than a year later.
2This year marks the 10th anniversary of the 'Morrison Music Trust' record label, headed by financier and arts patron, Lloyd Morrison.
3Schmidt and Rogers called on wealthy Chicagoans like the developer and ex-alderman Bill Singer and the developer and arts patron Lewis Manilow.
4Oh, I forgot -the guy was a billionaire arts patron and he owned a bunch of huge pharma companies that bankrolled all his plans.
5The New Yorker, January 26, 1998 P. 29 Signed Talk story about the funeral wake of arts patron Dominique de Menil.
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