No Room in Donald Trump’s Inn for Arts and Humanities

Image of Donald Trump and daughter at Washington, D.C. hotel groundbreaking

In 1965 John Steinbeck was a member of President Johnson’s council on the arts when Johnson signed legislation creating the National Endowment for the Arts, the federal agency charged with “bringing the arts to all Americans” and “providing leadership in arts education.” Steinbeck died before efforts in Congress to kill the infant agency got underway, in earnest, in 1981. Today, 35 years after arts-friendly Reaganites foiled that attempt, the ascendancy of Donald Trump appears to have handed anti-arts Republicans in Washington, D.C. the ammunition they need to finish the job. According to the website The Hill, “the Corporation for Public Broadcasting would be privatized, while the National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for the Humanities would be eliminated entirely” if the radical plan prevails.

In 1965 John Steinbeck was a member of President Johnson’s council on the arts when Johnson signed legislation creating the National Endowment for the Arts, the federal agency charged with ‘bringing the arts to all Americans’ and ‘providing leadership in arts education.’

It’s easy to imagine how John Steinbeck would react to the latest threat against the arts and humanities. He supported FDR’s New Deal and Johnson’s Great Society, applied “arts for all” as a principle in his writing, and—brought up on books, music, and art—demonstrated the value of arts and humanities education in almost every aspect of his life. Nearly 50 years after his death, his name and his novels continue to be cited when creativity is under attack by politicians, fanatics, and latter-day Mrs. Grundys. In an op-ed entitled “What Art Under Trump?” the novelist Margaret Atwood gives The Grapes of Wrath as an example of enduring art that outlasts the evils it was created to expose. Colson Whitehead, the 47-year-old author of The Underground Railroad, credited the research he did for his first high school term paper—on John Steinbeck—when he accepted the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction at yesterday’s meeting of the American Library Association.

Image of Donald Trump hotel at Old Post Office in Washington, D.C.

Rationalizing hatred of the arts and humanities of the kind on view in Donald Trump’s Washington, D.C. is harder than guessing where Steinbeck would stand. I know—I’ve tried—because at one time my job actually depended on it. Like John Steinbeck, I have an education in the arts and humanities to thank for whatever may be of value in my 35-year career as as a nonprofit executive and fundraiser for organizations in Florida and California. Unlike Steinbeck, I’m a middleman, not a creator. But the Washington, D.C. experience  I had while running the Palm Beach County Cultural Council gave me a preview of the arts under Donald Trump that I’m confident Steinbeck—who honored memory, history, and preservation—would appreciate.

Rationalizing hatred of the arts and humanities of the kind on view in Donald Trump’s Washington, D.C. is harder than guessing where Steinbeck would stand.

Image of the Old Post Office Pavilion in 1920When I visited Washington, D.C. during the 1980s and 90s, I usually stopped by the Old Post Office, famous for its soaring atrium, to listen, learn, and lobby. In the 1970s Nancy Hanks, chair of the National Endowment for the Arts under Nixon, saved the century-old building from demolition, and for 30 years—until Donald Trump signed the lease to turn it into a hotel—the Old Post Office served as a symbolically appropriate home for her agency. Some of my appointments were with successors to Nancy Hanks appointed by Republican presidents after Nixon. Frank Hodsoll, chair of the NEA under Reagan, was key to the regional initiative that advanced art creation, education, and marketing in my bailiwick, South Florida. Later on, in Miami, I interviewed John Frohnmayer, George H.W. Bush’s NEA chair, for a weekly public radio program I hosted in West Palm Beach. The subject of our talk was Leaving Town Alive, the book that Frohmayer (a Stanford-educated lawyer) wrote about his fight for survival in D.C.

In the 1970s Nancy Hanks, chair of the National Endowment for the Arts under Nixon, saved the Old Post Office from demolition, and for 30 years—until Donald Trump signed the lease to turn it into a hotel—the historic building served as a symbolically appropriate home for her agency.

Forced out of the home they helped save when it was closed to make way for Trump’s hotel, the NEA and NEH moved to Constitution Center, a modernist monstrosity in Washington, D.C. designed by the architect of the equally hideous Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Today Trump International Hotel occupies the historic building at 1100 Pennsylvania Avenue, Donald Trump occupies the historic house at 1600, and the agencies evicted from the Old Post Office in 2014 are experiencing the threat of their lives. The dreadful death cycle dramatized by John Steinbeck in The Grapes of Wrath—eviction and attack followed by extinction—faces the arts and humanities in Donald Trump’s Washington, D.C., where a great public building is now operated for private profit and the public agency responsible for preserving it is about to leave town permanently.

About William Ray

William Ray is a Steinbeck scholar living in Santa Clara, California. He received his PhD in English from the University of North Carolina.

Comments

  1. The barbarians have breached the gates and taken control of the city. It’s not going to be very pretty!

  2. Wes Stillwagon says:

    In management development training where we used psychological type testing, it was fairly common to hear discussions contrasting the Intuitive Feeler types (E.g. INFP, the pseudo-acronym of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator) with the Sensing Thinking types (E.g. ESTJ of the MBTI). The Sensing-Thinkers were the engineers and front-line supervisors and the human resources department and Graphic Arts department were heavily populated with Intuitive Feeling types. The Sensing thinkers were the no-nonsense time sensitive expediters and supervisors and engineers. It is easy to apply such generalities to contrast the Extraverted Sensing Feeler, selfish, here and now, detail oriented of the current president with the polar opposite able to connect conceptual dots and who clearly understand the important initiatives of supporting arts and humanities. Trump grew up in a very privileged home completely free of struggle or wants – experiences that develop and hone a personal value system. As a result, he is void of a well-developed value system. His business success was handed to him and in fact he had many failures due to his bad decisions and actions. He is selfish with an inflated ego (self-knowledge) that far exceeds reality. Any religious beliefs he has are mere show to maintain the support of the fundamentalist Christians who share the same narrow social views.
    On the other hand, if we didn’t have the dark times to be experienced in the next few years in arts and humanities due to the Republican President and Congress super-majority, perhaps we will never get the opportunity to really appreciate the value of support for such initiatives. Once our population awakens to the value of supporting the Arts and Humanities, legislation will be enacted that protect them from the selfish and narrow-minded. The problem is the majority of voters in this democracy are unaware of the value of the Arts and Humanities in providing for the general improvement of their lives.

  3. Roy Bentley says:

    Thanks, Will. Your voice assures me that at the heart-core of being human and alive on this planet there is a history and connectedness, that America is bigger than the sum of its malls!

    My best,

    Roy

  4. To paraphrase Winston Churchill, “If not for the arts, then for what have we fought?”

  5. Bob DeMott says:

    Excellent statement, Will! I am with you all the way. Plenty of writers could play the Steinbeck hand nowadays but my fear, which grows exponentially every day, is that the ones who listen to the warnings of the Merwins, the Whiteheads, the Solnits, etc are powerless in the face of the right wing barbarism of Trump and his allies.

    • Paul Douglass says:

      Bob hits the nail, as usual, in pointing out how many writers with “sway” are keeping their heads low, just like the Republican establishment–playing along to get along.
      I’m haunted by the call of Gold Star family father Khizr Khan, who warned that history would not forgive those in the GOP who failed to stand against Trump.

  6. Paul is so correct. Khizr Khan was not only strong, he was prophetic.

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