Roaming Through Rome with IA&A’s Cultural Exchange Programs

This past spring, International Arts & Artists (IA&A) had the opportunity to travel to Rome through a Sister Cities Grant funded by the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities. While in Italy, we met with artists, galleries, nonprofits, and universities with the aim of promoting artistic collaboration and exchange between Rome and Washington, DC.

This week, Jennifer Schrock and Chris Sciotto from IA&A’s Cultural Exchange Programs share more about from their experience in Rome and highlight how this trip helped advance their program’s goals and projects.   

There’s more to IA&A’s Cultural Exchange Programs than just J-1 visa sponsorship! We’re always seeking out new ways to build cross-cultural understanding through exchanges and partnerships in the arts. Our Exchange Visitor Program supports the next generation of creative leaders through internships, training programs, and other special projects in the arts. We’re also helping American museums and cultural organizations engage in more international work through our International Partnership Initiative. So when the opportunity arose to join our colleagues from IA&A at Hillyer in Rome this past spring, we jumped at the chance to further our program’s goals!

As we prepared for our trip to Rome, we outlined three distinct goals for our trip. Given the scope of our work, we were focused on promoting exchange programs, identifying potential partners for future exchanges, and hearing the perspectives of Italian students and artists who might be interested in participating in exchange programs. Of course, we were also excited to practice what we preach! We wanted to learn more about our sister city and the Romans who give it life.

We kicked off our week with “Exchange Ideas”, a conference co-presented by IA&A, the U.S. Embassy in Rome, and Sala 1, a nonprofit research center for contemporary art, architecture, performance, and music. Speaking at “Exchange Ideas” gave us the opportunity to highlight the benefits of and advocate for people-to-people exchanges. We were excited to speak with attendees afterwards and received great questions about exchanges from high school-aged students who were already thinking about interning abroad!

In addition to the conference, the networks we developed and organizations we learned of during our meetings revealed a number of potential partners for collaborative programming and exchanges. In sharing information about the Exchange Visitor Program with university career counselors, we received valuable feedback about when and where informational resources can make vital differences in a student’s ability to participate in an internship abroad. Throughout our trip, we also distributed a number of copies of our report Art in Context: The Current State of International Engagement.

While we were pleased to have made real headway on our objectives, speaking with university staff highlighted a gap that we would have loved more time to address. One thing we learned is that, in the broader context of finding internships abroad, the importance of applying for visa in preparation is not always made clear to students. We would have liked an opportunity to host an information-sharing session for educators, mentors, students, and other interested audiences to discuss the logistical considerations of participating in an exchange program.

Perhaps one of the most surprising things our team learned while speaking with some of Rome’s contemporary artists was the degree to which the city’s history and tradition of fine art, and the responsibility of maintaining that tradition, weigh on the creative consciousness of Roman artists. Of course, it was no surprise that a tradition of such importance and influence could seem imposing to contemporary creatives; as Americans, with a much shorter historical experience as a nation and a substantially younger culture, such a thought had not occurred to some of us before. IA&A’s Cultural Exchange Programs has been thinking of ways to incorporate the insight we gained from our discussions with artists into our public programs and we’re excited to use this element of creative identity in IA&A’s Art in Context programming series.

Overall, our trip to Rome was a great chance to further develop the relationship between American and Italian artists and cultural organizations, as well as to lay the foundations for future work. From facilitating reciprocal exchanges to collaborative programming, there’s no shortage of opportunities! We came away from our trip confident that personal relationships are the driving force behind lasting and meaningful international relationships. Parts of the trip would not have been possible without help from our contacts in Italy, including some alumni from our Exchange Visitor Program. This experience further reinforced the findings from Art in Context: The Current State of International Engagement regarding the value of personal relationships. We look forward to further developing our relationships with our new friends and partners!

 

This blog post was produced as part of a grant funded by the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, an agency supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts.

 

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