
The recent Kennedy Center controversy has mostly been told as a story about a name. That is understandable. A national cultural institution created as a living memorial to John F. Kennedy was, for a time, refashioned into another surface for presidential branding. The litigation over that move has now produced an important result: a federal judge has ruled that the Center cannot be renamed without Congress, and the institution has been ordered to remove references to “Trump Kennedy Center” from its official materials and signage.
But the more revealing heritage story may not be the name on the front of the building. It may be what was happening inside.
Josef Palermo, the Kennedy Center’s former curator of visual arts and special programming, has described a chaotic year inside the institution: artist cancellations, shrinking audiences, staff firings, leadership turnover, and a political takeover grafted onto an institution that had long served as one of the nation’s central cultural stages. His account is especially striking because Palermo was responsible for the artworks in the building. Shortly after the announcement of a planned two-year closure, Palermo says Richard Grenell instructed him to “get rid of everything” in the permanent collection because new art would be needed after the reopening. Palermo says that if donors did not want to pay for the removal of works, they could be auctioned or given away.
That allegation is not a theft. It should not be described as one. But it may be something nearly as revealing: administrative looting applied to America’s cultural heritage.
The Kennedy Center is not simply a theater complex. Since its opening in 1971, it has also functioned as a site of cultural diplomacy. Palermo’s account lays out the quieter history of the Center’s rooms. The Israeli Lounge, the Chinese Lounge, the Circles Lounge (formerly the Russian Lounge until the invasion of Ukraine), and the African Room were not just donor hospitality spaces. They were material expressions of international relationships, memory, and diplomacy. The Israeli Lounge, Palermo notes, was decorated with support from the Israeli government as a gift to the American people and in tribute to President Kennedy, celebrating the connection between Judaism and music. Other rooms similarly gave physical form to the Kennedy Center’s role as a venue where culture, diplomacy, and national memory overlapped.
That is what makes the reported treatment of those spaces so troubling. Palermo describes a sudden decision to sell sponsorships of the Center’s lounges. The Circles Lounge became the SyberJet Lounge. The African Room was transformed into “A Tribute to America’s Intelligence Community.” Among the items taken down from the former African Room were handmade textiles, a wooden sculpture donated by Ghana to represent African grief after Kennedy’s assassination, and carved doors made from centuries-old wood depicting Yoruba village scenes.

Those carved doors deserve more than a passing reference. In 1973, the Nigerian carver Lamidi Olonade Fakeye was commissioned by the Nations of Africa to carve a pair of doors and a transom as a gift to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, to be installed in the African Lounge. The doors were made from the wood of a single 700-year-old tree and depict Yoruba village scenes. They were not just decorations. They were a material act of cultural diplomacy, made for a specific place, with a specific commemorative purpose.
A current Kennedy Center staffer told The Atlantic that these objects were placed in the building’s archives for safekeeping during construction. That may prove true. It may also be that the works are carefully inventoried, preserved, and returned to meaningful public display. But the episode still reveals a deep failure of care: diplomatic rooms became naming opportunities, and cultural objects became obstacles to grift.
The legal case over the name gives the controversy a useful constitutional and statutory frame. Representative Joyce Beatty, an ex officio trustee of the Kennedy Center, challenged the attempted renaming, arguing that Congress named the institution and that the board could not unilaterally attach Trump’s name to it. U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper agreed that the name change was unauthorized without congressional action and ordered the removal of Trump’s name from official materials and signage. The court also preliminarily blocked the board’s planned two-year closure, while making clear that needed capital repair work could continue and that the board could revisit closure only after a proper, prudent decision-making process. So the formal legal holding is not about the art collection. It is about statutory authority, governance, and the limits of a board’s power. But those are precisely the issues that matter for cultural-object stewardship. Who has authority over public cultural institutions? What duties follow from that authority? And what happens when trusteeship is treated as a political prize rather than a public trust?
The temptation is to reach for the most dramatic analogies: Nazi looting, wartime plunder, occupied museums. But that is not quite right here. The Kennedy Center is not Kherson, and Washington is not an occupied city. No invading army packed paintings into trucks. The better comparison is not armed conflict but institutional capture.
In Hungary, Viktor Orbán’s government, until its recent defeat, offered a contemporary model of how cultural life can be reshaped without soldiers or bonfires. Cultural institutions can be redirected through appointments, funding, foundations, grant-making, and ideological management. Museums, theaters, universities, and arts bodies do not need to be destroyed to be controlled. They can be made to understand which histories, artists, and institutions will receive support, and which will be shunned.
Turkey offers another version of the same pattern. Recent changes there have raised concerns that the central government can seize historic properties from local authorities, including opposition-run cultural sites in Istanbul. Again, the issue is not battlefield plunder. It is a legal and administrative machinery that turns heritage into a lever of political control.
The same pattern is visible in the administration’s treatment of the Smithsonian. The Smithsonian is not just another museum network. It is the country’s great national cultural institution: a sprawling public trust of museums, research centers, collections, archives, and the National Zoo. Yet the administration’s March 2025 executive order treated it less as an independent cultural and scholarly institution than as a messaging problem to be corrected. The order directed Vice President J.D. Vance, in his role as a Smithsonian Regent, to work to remove “improper ideology” from Smithsonian museums and programs. It also directed Vance and the Office of Management and Budget to work with Congress to condition future appropriations so that federal funds would not support exhibits or programs deemed inconsistent with the administration’s preferred account of American history. That is an effort to make the nation’s cultural memory bend toward the uses of the party in power.
The broader danger is not only that art might be lost, damaged, auctioned, or hidden away. The danger is that a public cultural institution can be treated as a trophy of political victory. Rename the building. Purge the leadership and call it renovation.
None of this requires calling the Kennedy Center episode a theft. The more precise word is capture. Or perhaps administrative looting: the use of lawful-looking authority to strip an institution of its independence, expertise, history, and public purpose.
The Kennedy Center story matters because it shows how cultural heritage can be damaged in stages. First the name changes. Then the staff changes. Then the donors change. Then the rooms change. Then the objects come down. By the time anyone asks where the collection went, the institution may already have been remade.
I do not want to live in a country where public cultural institutions become trophies of political victory. I want to live in a republic, where museums, monuments, theaters, archives, and collections are held in trust for the public, not redecorated to flatter whoever happens to hold power. My family did not send men to Europe in World War II so that, eighty years later, public institutions could be treated as ornaments for a strongman’s vanity. That is not the republic they fought for. And it is not the republic we should accept: a republic cannot preserve its heritage if every public institution is available for capture by the next man who wants his name on every building.
Bibliography
Josef Palermo, “What I Saw Inside the Kennedy Center ($),” The Atlantic (Apr. 16, 2026).
Beatty v. Trump, No. 25-cv-4480, Memorandum Opinion (D.D.C. May 29, 2026).
Steven Sloan & Meg Kinnard, “Kennedy Center moves to erase Trump references after judge said they were illegally added,” Associated Press (June 4, 2026).
Andrew Chung, “Kennedy Center to remove Trump name after court decision,” Reuters (June 5, 2026).
Schuettinger Conservation Services, “Kennedy Center African Lounge Doors and Transom.”
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, “African Lounge.”
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, “The Kennedy Center: A Historical and Artistic Tour,” Google Arts & Culture.
Executive Order, “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History,” The White House (Mar. 27, 2025).
Veronika Molnar, “Dismantling Orbán’s 16-Year Grip on Hungary’s Art World,” Hyperallergic (Apr. 17, 2026).
Artistic Freedom Initiative, “Systematic Suppression: Hungary’s Arts & Culture in Crisis,” Jan. 2026.
Richard Unwin, “‘The extremely happy part of the crowd’: Hungarian arts figures hope for change after 16 years of Orbán rule,” The Art Newspaper (Apr. 16, 2026).
Ayla Jean Yackley, “Turkey’s heritage power grab: new law threatens Istanbul’s opposition-run cultural sites,” The Art Newspaper (Feb. 20, 2026).