Gallery Patrons: $3,500-$4,999
Gallery Patrons of The Phillips Collection make a significant difference to all that the museum offers the public through its outstanding permanent collection and special exhibitions, its educational programs and outreach, the critically acclaimed Sunday Concerts, and a host of programs, events, and activities.
In recognition of their important contribution to the museum, Gallery Patrons receive the following opportunities to become more engaged in the life of the Phillips:
- Invitations to unique events, such as private dinners, tours of private art collections, special exhibition previews and receptions, preferred seating at the annual Gala, and opportunities for entertaining at the Phillips
- Personalized access to the Phillips and senior staff, including private tours with the director and curators, an invitation to lunch with the director, an art consultation, and library privileges by appointment
- Recognition, including prominent placement on the Phillips’s donor wall and in museum publications
- Concierge services, including access to the Circles and Patrons VIP line, invitations to exclusive events for you and your family, reserved seating for lectures and concerts, and special travel opportunities
- Other opportunities, including free museum admission for two, free admission to many special activities and events, reciprocal membership benefits with 300 museums nationwide, complimentary exhibition catalogs and a gift membership, discounts in the museum shop and café, and subscriptions to The Phillips Collection Magazine and the museum's e-newsletter.
Gallery Patron gifts are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.
Join or renew.
For more information on the Gallery Patrons, please contact:
Allison Chance, Director of Individual Giving
achance@phillipscollection.org
202-387-2151 x314
Jacob Lawrence, The Migration Series, Panel no. 5: Migrants were advanced passage on the railroads, paid for by northern industry. Northern industry was to be repaid by the migrants out of their future wages, 1940-1941. © 2008 Estate of Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.