Ronald Reagan waves beside his spouse Nancy Reagan throughout his 1981 inaugural ceremony in Washington, D.C. He’s the star of a brand new orchestral and video work highlighting episodes from his life.
Consolidated Information Footage/AFP through Getty Pictures
cover caption
toggle caption
Consolidated Information Footage/AFP through Getty Pictures
One evening final month, President Ronald Reagan’s voice floated above music from his movie profession at his presidential library and museum in Simi Valley, Calif. He’s the star of a brand new orchestral and video work highlighting episodes from his colourful life.
A regional group, the New West Symphony, created “The Ronald Reagan Overture” as a part of a much bigger live performance marking the nation’s 250th anniversary. The work contains excerpts from the soundtrack of his 1942 film King’s Row, his 1987 speech encouraging Russian chief Mikhail Gorbachev to “tear down” the Berlin Wall, and loads of pictures of the previous Hollywood actor waving and smiling.
Patriotic artwork like that is taking middle stage this yr. However behind the stirring melodies and flag-draped levels, a major shift in federal coverage is quietly reshaping what sort of tradition will get funded in America.
“Stirring patriotism on America’s birthday: That could be a stable message,” mentioned Michael Christie, the New West Symphony’s music director, in an interview with NPR. “I am happy with it.”
The New West Symphony created “The Ronald Reagan Overture” as a part of a much bigger live performance marking the nation’s 250th anniversary final month.
The Ronald Reagan Presidential Basis and Institute
cover caption
toggle caption
The Ronald Reagan Presidential Basis and Institute
Christie and the musicians carried out within the lofty atrium towards the backdrop of an unlimited American flag, with Reagan’s Air Pressure One hanging above the viewers. Fairly a number of of the 600 folks within the room had been decked out in pink, white and blue.
“It reaches out to your coronary heart. It touches you inside and outside,” mentioned viewers member Theresa Brunasso. “And it makes you so proud to be an American.”
A coverage shift
“The Ronald Reagan Overture” was made doable with the assistance of a $25,000 grant from the Nationwide Endowment for the Arts (NEA) — one in every of 50 such grants the federal company awarded to cultural teams across the nation to create artworks in celebration of a number of the figureheads slated for inclusion within the “Nationwide Backyard of American Heroes.”
President Donald Trump first proposed the sculpture park, that includes 250 life-size statues of notable American figures, in 2020. Reagan is on the checklist, together with Muhammad Ali, Susan B. Anthony and Elvis Presley. The development of the challenge remains to be on the proposal part.
The NEA has at all times funded excess of patriotic programming. However this anniversary yr, the endowment has positioned a selected emphasis on nationwide satisfaction.
In a press release, the NEA mentioned the anniversary is “a possibility to rejoice our nation’s wealthy inventive heritage and cultural legacy” by means of “many inventive disciplines and views.”
In 2025, the Trump Administration rescinded $21 million in NEA grants, in keeping with the humanities advocacy nonprofit Individuals for the Arts.

The cash was pulled from initiatives that didn’t meet the administration’s funding goals — for instance, in the event that they had been too centered on range, fairness and inclusion. As NPR reported, the NEA eradicated the “Problem America” grant program, which supported organizations specializing in “traditionally underserved communities which have restricted entry to the humanities relative to geography, ethnicity, economics, and/or incapacity.” The administration then prioritized grant functions that centered on extra patriotic works, like army band performances.
Artists lean into the spirit of American patriotism
The sudden lack of funding that they’d counted on devastated arts teams across the nation. As NPR reported final yr, a whole bunch of arts teams obtained emails that instantly knowledgeable them their grants had been terminated.

Final fall, media retailers reported that some teams refused grants, as a result of they did not wish to be restricted by the NEA’s new insurance policies, which make candidates certify that they won’t function any applications selling “range, fairness, and inclusion” in accordance with one in every of Trump’s govt orders.
However different arts teams, similar to Sones de México Ensemble, leaned into the spirit of American patriotism.
Final yr, the NEA abruptly rescinded a $20,000 grant awarded to the Chicago-based, Mexican folks music group for the creation of live shows and teaching programs round a well-liked sort of Mexican ballad often known as a corrido.
Juan Díes performs Corrido de Roberto Clemente, a ballad concerning the well-known baseball participant.
Erika Erdely
cover caption
toggle caption
Erika Erdely
“The argument was that it did not match the brand new pointers beneath the brand new administration,” mentioned the group’s cofounder, Juan Díes.
So when he heard concerning the NEA’s new grants, Díes determined to look down the checklist of proposed statue topics.
“And I picked eight folks in U.S. historical past that I felt I may write a corrido about,” Díes mentioned.
He re-pitched the challenge to the NEA, this time utilizing Trump Administration-approved topics like aviator Amelia Earhart and baseball star Roberto Clemente. The grant got here by means of.
Like different corridos, Díes’ new ballads are celebratory. However in addition they do not draw back from darker particulars, similar to together with traces concerning the racism Clemente confronted as a high-profile Puerto Rican within the U.S.
“Nunca agachó la cabeza y condenaba el racismo,” Díes sings in his corrido about Clemente. “Although he confronted loads of racism he by no means bowed down his head.”
“I do not really feel like we’re compromising our objectives or mission,” mentioned Díes of tailoring his grant software to slot in with Trump Administration priorities. “By taking part in with the foundations, we’re in a position to give our perspective on the lives of those American heroes.”
Two types of patriotism
David Lubin, a retired Wake Forest College professor who has written books about American artwork, politics and cultural propaganda, mentioned there are two types of patriotism.
“One is, ‘My nation, proper or mistaken,’ that America is the best place on the face of the earth,” Lubin mentioned. “And the opposite is the patriotic emotion of, ‘We are able to do higher. And it is our mission in life to maintain hewing to the beliefs of the origins of the nation.'”
Lubin mentioned patriotic artwork is usually a great tool for governments as a result of it will probably unite folks round insurance policies and ideologies. However when a rustic is as politically divided because the U.S. is right now, Lubin mentioned patriotic artwork typically solely finally ends up reinforcing rifts.
“It feeds into thought patterns which can be already prevalent amongst half the inhabitants,” Lubin mentioned. “Like preaching to the transformed.”
Arts, patriotism and civility
Again on the Reagan Museum and Library, Reagan Basis spokesperson Melissa Giller mentioned the fortieth president believed patriotism may coexist with a variety of views.
“He actually believed in bipartisanship, at all times believed in reaching throughout the aisle,” she mentioned.
Giller mentioned the muse is now working to unfold the late president’s worldview.
The Reagan Basis gave away free Civility Handbooks primarily based on the late president’s rules to attendees ultimately month’s live performance.
The Ronald Reagan Presidential Basis and Institute
cover caption
toggle caption
The Ronald Reagan Presidential Basis and Institute
“We have created a brand new middle referred to as the Heart on Civility and Democracy,” Giller mentioned. “Actually, we had been freely giving free “Civility Handbooks” when folks had been checking in.”
The handbook goals to assist Individuals have interaction in respectful dialogue in on a regular basis conditions. Throughout intermission, folks thumbed by means of the small paperback with its stars-and-stripes cowl, afterwards, slipping it into their purses and pockets.
Jennifer Vanasco edited the printed and digital variations of this story. Chloee Weiner blended the audio.

