Sentences with phrase «widespread fame»

"Widespread fame" means being well-known or famous by a large number of people throughout a wide area or a broad range of people. Full definition
Yaxhá gained widespread fame in 2005 when Survivor Guatemala was filmed here.
Rhoades, who first came to widespread fame with his 1993 show at David Zwirner in New York, is the subject of a solo exhibition at Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA), Philadelphia, opening this September.
Radio commentator Paul Harvey gained widespread fame by reporting factual stories with a twist at the end.
The actual ancestry of modern Chinese Crested dogs also is tied through the breeds in Europe and America, where they began their formal recognition and widespread fame in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Tate Britain will put together the first mid-career survey of work by artist Chris Ofili, who first sprang to widespread fame with his paintings embellished with elephant dung in Sensation, the 1997 exhibition of Young British Artists.
Many authors have found that self - publishing is a great option for getting their book to friends and family, but those who are hoping it's an easy route to widespread fame are often disappointed.
But perhaps that's fitting given Sargent's own reputation as a society portraitist, whose glamorous depictions of the British aristocracy won him, and some of his subjects, widespread fame.
Rockets to widespread fame in 1949 following a four - page spread in LIFE magazine that asked, «Is he the greatest living painter in the United States?»
We never evolved as a species with the inherent ability to deal with widespread fame and wealth without becoming mentally ill often times.
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