Gili is an architect, photographer, and current postdoc at the Research Department for Spatial Design at TU Vienna, where she explores (through teaching and research) the politics of sacred landscapes and the interrelations between natural and man-made topographies. Her teaching methods focus on first-hand experience and observation, and include field trips, photography and filmmaking.
Formerly the Head of History and Theory at the Royal College of Art and a Diploma Unit Master at the Architectural Association, Merin holds a PhD from the AA in London and had studied architecture at the Bezalel Academy in Jerusalem, the UdK in Berlin, and the Waseda University of Tokyo. Her doctoral dissertation 'Towards Jerusalem: The Architecture of Pilgrimage' (supervised by Pier Vittorio Aureli and Maria S. Giudici) explores structures of spiritual travel using photography as a design tool. In 2018, the thesis won the annual AA writing prize; in 2023, it was awarded grants from the Graham Foundation Grant and the Austrian Ministry of Arts and Culture (BMKOES) and will be published as the book “Analogous Jerusalem” by Humboldt Books in 2025.
Merin lectured, participated in panels, and led workshops at various institutions, amongst them the Harvard GSD, the MoMA, the CCA, EPFL, and the Universities of Syracuse, Porto, Aarhus, Rice, Carelton, and Aalto. Her photographs have been exhibited in several exhibitions and publications worldwide, including the Venice Architecture Biennale, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, HKW in Berlin, the Rotterdam Biennale and the Seoul Biennale for Urbanism. Her writings and reportages have been translated into German, French, Spanish, Russian and Portuguese; she has been published in several journals including the Economist, the AA Files, MIT’s Thresholds, Plat Journal, The Guardian, Apollo Magazine, The Architects’ Journal, and the Architectural Review.