On July 14, two Congressional representatives—Dina Titus (D-Nevada) and Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas) proposed a invoice that will defend public artworks commissioned by the U.S. authorities.
The PRESERVE Act (“Defending Assets and Guaranteeing Stewardship of Enduring Data of Visible Expression Act”) would require the Common Companies Administration, which manages federal businesses, to determine any artworks contained inside authorities buildings deemed “surplus property” and type a committee to supervise the way forward for stated artworks.
“Publicly commissioned artwork ought to by no means turn into collateral injury when federal buildings are bought or in any other case disposed of” stated Titus, a co-sponsor of the invoice, in a assertion. “It’s crucial that we set up a course of to guard these nationwide treasures and make sure the public has full entry to the 26,000 artistic endeavors exhibited in museums and federal buildings across the nation, regardless of who sits within the Oval Workplace. Artwork commissioned by the federal authorities is a crucial a part of our nationwide heritage and deserves to be preserved for future generations.”
Whereas the language of the PRESERVE Act doesn’t particularly point out any authorities buildings, Titus and Doggett’s assertion calls out the Wilbur J. Cohen Federal Constructing. For the previous 9 months, preservationists, artists, and senators have been advocating to avoid wasting the Cohen constructing, generally known as the “Sistine Chapel of New Deal Artwork.”
The landmark constructing designed by Charles Z. Klauder opened in 1940 throughout Franklin D. Roosevelt’s presidency and was initially residence to the Social Safety Administration. Its partitions are embellished with sweeping murals by Philip Guston, Ben Shahn, and twin sisters Ethel and Jenne Magafan. Regardless of this, President Trump has threatened to demolish the Cohen constructing, together with three others.
Residing New Deal, a nonprofit that’s engaged on a database of New Deal public artworks throughout America, is likely one of the organizations that has endorsed the PRESERVE Act. The group’s petition, launched in November 2025 to avoid wasting the Cohen, was in response to the GSA’s new “accelerated disposal” program, which allows federal properties to be bought with restricted public enter. Within the spring of 2025, 45 buildings have been listed for accelerated disposal, the Cohen constructing amongst them; three extra have been added in 2026.
However, as Mary Okin, assistant director of Residing New Deal, identified. “The GSA is the first steward of New Deal artwork, all of which belongs to the American folks.” The perspective of the invoice is evident: The company must be within the enterprise of preserving it, not destroying it.

