Ava DuVernay, an Oscar-nominated and Emmy-winning director, has urged artists and historians to hold the line against a âcriminalâ US president at a time when âtruth itself is under revisionâ.
DuVernay, whose films include Selma, which chronicles Martin Luther Kingâs campaign for voting rights, issued the rallying cry while receiving an award at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington.
The ceremony came against the backdrop of Donald Trump signing an executive order that seeks to purge âimproper, divisive, or anti-American ideologyâ from the Smithsonian Institution. The president has also seized control of the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and fired the librarian of Congress, Carla Hayden.
Asked if she is alarmed by Trumpâs assault on arts and culture, DuVernay told the Guardian: âCertainly. But not surprised. When you elect a criminal you should expect crimes.â
Trump is the first convicted felon to serve as president, having been found guilty last year on 34 counts of falsifying business records to conceal a hush-money payment to the adult film performer Stormy Daniels. Yet his election did not surprise DuVernay. âIt feels right in line,â the 52-year-old mused. âI study history. So.â
Selma was the first film directed by an African American woman to be nominated for a best picture Oscar. DuVernayâs other works include 13th, a documentary about racial injustice and mass incarceration, and Origin, an adaptation of the historian Isabel Wilkersonâs book Caste.
On Thursday she became the first director, writer and producer to receive the Smithsonianâs Great Americans Medal, which recognises lifetime contributions that embody American ideals and ideas. Previous honourees include the secretary of state Madeleine Albright, general Colin Powell, musician Paul Simon, doctor Anthony Fauci and supreme court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (posthumously).
In an acceptance speech that drew a standing ovation at the National Museum of American History, DuVernay did not mention Trump by name but offered a stirring defence of the Smithsonian, which she described as âan institution that understands the weight of history and the wonder of telling it well.
âThat understanding feels especially urgent now at a time when truth itself is under revision and fear feels like an animating force. Fear of mirrors, fear of memory, fear of the full American story told in its dazzling complexity and devastating contradictions.â
The film-maker, who grew up in Compton, California, continued: âHistory is not a weapon to be sheathed when inconvenient. Itâs not a bedtime story meant to lull us to sleep. It is a river flowing deep and often turbulent and the Smithsonian has long been the bridge that lets us cross with care. We know that what is sometimes labelled improper ideology is in fact connective. That what some call distorted is simply a new perspective, long buried, now revealed.
âLet me tell you about a child who walks into the Smithsonian museums and sees a photograph of a woman who looks like her mother or grandmother, standing tall in protest or in prayer or in pride. Let me tell you about a teacher who brings students here because their textbooks do not speak of redlining or Tulsa or internment camps or Stonewall.
âLet me tell you about families â Black, white, Native, immigrant â who walk through the doors of Smithsonian museums and feel that this country might just make room for them after all. That is not indoctrination. That is belonging. That is education. That is democracy.â
DuVernay paid tribute to the Smithsonian secretary, Lonnie Bunch, for confronting the contradictions in Americaâs founding and illuminating the fault lines in its systems. âBecause the truth is there is no honour in history that flatters itself,â she said. âThere is no integrity in memory that only remembers some and thereâs no future in forgetting.
âTo those who would close their eyes to injustice, who would silence the voices of our elders, our ancestors, our scholars, our artists, I offer this. We will not comply with forgetting. We will not make myths in place of memory. We will not trade the truth for contortions in comfort.
âInstead we will gather, we will remember, we will teach, we will share, we will tell it all. Let us hold that line and let us remind those who try to restore a narrow divisive view of the past that the future belongs to the whole of us. And even when the current swell is upon us, the bridge will hold because truth deserves passage. And with the Smithsonian and this museum we do not cross alone.â
Founded in 1846, the Smithsonian is the worldâs biggest museum, education and research complex. But Trumpâs executive order, issued in March, argues that the institution has recently âcome under the influence of a divisive, race-centered ideologyâ and calls on Vice-President JD Vance, a member of the Smithsonianâs board of regents, to lead a counteroffensive.
In an interview Anthea Hartig, the director of the National Museum of American History, said her institution had not felt political pressure yet. âWe put ourselves through our own paces and we need to be able to defend our scholarship, our choice of interpretation and our framing and then engage in honest discourse. So far itâs been a very honest and forthright exchange.â
She added: âWe appreciate everyoneâs concern deeply and we truly ask them to continue to support us and to visit and to engage in the big questions of history that we present.â