Italian Latin American Institute (IILA)
The Italian Latin American Institute — known by its Italian acronym IILA (Istituto Italo-Latino Americano) — is an intergovernmental organisation headquartered in Rome that promotes cultural, scientific, and economic cooperation between Italy and the twenty Latin American member states. Founded in 1966 and housed near the historic centre, IILA operates as a multilateral cultural diplomacy hub linking two continents through art exhibitions, scholarships, and joint research programmes.
At a glance
- Type
- Intergovernmental cultural and scientific organisation
- Period
- Established 1966
- Style
- Modern institutional building, central Rome
- Location
- Rome, Lazio, Italy — 41.9183° N, 12.4933° E
Overview
The Italian Latin American Institute is a unique intergovernmental body that brings together Italy and twenty sovereign Latin American nations under a single institutional roof in Rome. Its mandate spans cultural exchange, scientific cooperation, and economic dialogue, making it one of the few organisations of its kind to bridge Europe and Latin America at the state level. The institute publishes research, organises exhibitions, and awards fellowships to scholars and artists from member countries.
History
IILA was established on 3 June 1966 through an international agreement signed in Rome by Italy and the founding Latin American member states, reflecting the strong historical and cultural ties born of Italian emigration to the Americas during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Over the following decades membership expanded to include all twenty Latin American republics. The institute has been based in central Rome since its foundation, consolidating its role as a diplomatic and cultural crossroads between the two regions.
What you see
The institute occupies an institutional building in central Rome adapted to host offices, conference halls, exhibition spaces, and a specialised library focused on Latin American studies. The premises regularly host temporary art shows, book launches, and academic seminars that draw diplomats, scholars, and the public. Display areas present rotating exhibitions of contemporary Latin American art, crafts, and photography alongside archival materials documenting the long relationship between Italy and the Americas.
Cultural significance
IILA holds a singular position as the only intergovernmental body specifically devoted to Italy–Latin America relations, giving it diplomatic weight beyond that of a typical cultural institute. Its programmes have supported thousands of scholars and artists over six decades, reinforcing the cultural continuity created by the massive Italian diaspora in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, and beyond. The institute’s Rome seat embeds Latin American cultural presence at the very heart of Italian civic life.
Practical information
- Address
- Piazza Benedetto Cairoli 3, 00186 Rome, Italy
- Hours
- Check official website for current opening hours and event schedule
- Admission
- Generally free for public exhibitions; registration may be required for events
- Website
- iila.org
Getting there
The institute is situated in the historic centre of Rome within walking distance of Campo de’ Fiori and Largo di Torre Argentina. The nearest bus stops are served by multiple lines running along Corso Vittorio Emanuele II. The closest metro station is Spagna (Line A), approximately 1.5 km away, though the area is best reached by bus or on foot from the city centre.
Sources & resources
- Wikipedia — Istituto italo-latinoamericano
- Cultural Heritage Online — discover more Italian heritage sites
