The relentless campaign against cultural landmarks by Trump and his associates shows no sign of abating. The current administration has set its sights on a building near the National Mall, which features a series of notable New Deal-era murals that highlight social security—a topic as pertinent today as when the artwork was first created.
Journalist Aaron Short delves into the ongoing battle to preserve this architecturally significant building. A newly launched petition likens it to a ‘Sistine Chapel’ of art dedicated to working-class communities, reflecting those abandoned by the government during the Great Depression—a neglect that persists today.
This isn’t the Trump administration’s first attempt to dismantle essential cultural and artistic heritage, and it likely won’t be the last. Social realist painter Ben Shahn once described his fresco as his finest work, and contemporary artists are determined not to let it fade into obscurity.
According to Alex Lawson, executive director of the advocacy group Social Security Works, “We couldn’t stop them from dismantling the East Wing of the White House, but I pledge we’ll stop them from destroying the Wilbur Cohen building.” Lawson, among the authors of the petition to protect this historic site in Washington, DC, emphasizes the significance of preserving works by artists such as Ben Shahn, Philip Guston, and Ethel and Jenne Magafan.