Ilaria Giacobbi graduated from the University of Siena with a degree in Letters and Philosophy, specializing in Art, Film, Music, and Theatre Studies, and wrote her thesis on theatrical research methodology titled *Kaos. A Cathedral of Celluloid for Pirandello.* She further pursued Art History studies at both the University of Siena and Roma Tre, earning a Master's degree with a research thesis on the rediscovered frescoes of the Church of San Giovanni dei Fiori in Oristano.
She also holds two Master's degrees: one in Historical, Linguistic, and Literary Disciplines, and another as an expert in Historical Communication, Multimedia, and Digital Languages, both from Roma Tre University. Currently, she is completing a second Master's degree in Archaeology while participating in excavation campaigns with Roma Tre.
As a certified high school teacher of humanities, Ilaria also works as an art historian, serving as a consultant on restoration projects. Since 2015, she has collaborated with the art association Morsi d'Arte, where she serves as educational project manager. She is also the president of an association dedicated to preserving Rome's cobblestone streets (Sanpietrini) as historical heritage.
In 2018, she became a certified curator for Rome Art Week and founded Bauhaus Home Gallery, an informal exhibition space. Ilaria also organizes cultural tours in Rome and writes for the academic journal *Scriptura.* She has served on juries for the MARte LIVE Visual Arts section and contributed to the De Agostini Contemporary Art Atlas.
Among the notable events she has curated are several international contemporary art exhibitions in Sardinia and Rome, including the *Contemporary Rome Art* exhibition at Palazzo Velli Expò. She also founded the Artemide Prize and curated the first edition of the Salento Biennale.
Events at Rome Art Week
2024
Free access