President Donald Trump said Thursday he is “sad to see the history and culture of our great country being ripped apart with the removal of our beautiful [Confederate] statues and monuments.”

“So foolish! Also the beauty that is being taken out of our cities, towns and parks will be greatly missed and never able to be comparably replaced!” Trump wrote on Twitter.

But Trump’s appreciation of art and historical significance, if genuine, is certainly newfound — in 1980, he demolished the iconic Bonwit Teller building and reneged on a promise to the Met to save a pair of Art Deco sculptures and metal grillwork from the front of the building so that the museum could include them in its 20th century sculpture collection.

Trump had initially promised to donate the grillwork and the sculptures — two limestone relief panels created by Beaux-Arts designers Whitney Warren and Charles Wetmore and appraised by art dealer Robert Miller at “several hundred thousand dollars” — if the cost was not “prohibitive.”

“The reliefs are as important as the sculptures on the Rockefeller building,” Miller told the Times. “They’ll never be made again.”

“Trump Organization vice president” John Baron — an alias Trump once admitted under oath he uses to feed reporters information about himself — told the New York Times Trump had come to a different conclusion. It would have cost $32,000 and a week-and-a-half of construction on the $100 million building to remove them, and “Baron” ultimately decided it wasn’t worth the effort to save the panels because they were “without artistic merit.”

The Met disagreed. “We are certainly very disappointed and quite surprised,” Ashton Hawkins, then the vice president of the Met board, told the Times in 1980. “Can you imagine the museum accepting them if they were not of artistic merit?”

But Trump says he does see artistic merit in the Confederate statues, which were largely erected in the 1920s and 30s — decades after the Civil War — at the behest of Southern activist groups.

“You’re changing history, you’re changing culture,” he said at a press conference Monday, where he also passionately defended the white supremacists at the Charlottesville protest that left one woman dead and 19 injured.

Trump’s chief strategist Steve Bannon offered an alternative explanation for Trump’s newfound appreciation of Confederate monuments