Gregori Aminoff
Gregori Aminoff was a Swedish mineralogist, artist, and a member of the Aminoff family. During his career, Aminoff introduced X-ray diffraction and electron diffraction to the Swedish scientific community and was a pioneer in crystallography in Sweden.
Education and career
Aminoff was born in Stockholm and studied mineralogy at Stockholm University and took exams at Uppsala University, where he received a bachelor's degree in 1905. He switched to art after graduation and studied art first at the Konstnärsförbundets skola in Stockholm until its closure in 1908 and later in Italy with Henri Matisse. He exhibited with De Unga in Stockholm in 1909, 1910 and 1911, was represented at the Autumn Salon in Paris in 1909, and in 1912 together with Arvid Nilsson had the solo exhibition Salon Joel in Stockholm. He also participated in exhibitions at the Konstnärsförbundet and at the Royal Swedish Academy of Fine Arts' spring exhibitions. Aminoff liked to paint naked bodies in landscapes but also urban motifs, portraits and landscapes. He is represented with works at, among others, the National Museum in Stockholm.Aminoff supported himself through his art practices mostly through taking temporary jobs. In 1914, Aminoff stopped painting and resumed his studies of mineralogy and crystallography, which he had previously put aside. Through the great support from his first wife, Aminoff received a licentiate at Stockholm University in 1916. He later received his PhD in 1918 from Stockholm University and became a docent in mineralogy and crystallography. In the same year, Aminoff introduced X-ray crystallography in Sweden. In 1923, he became a professor at the Mineralogical Department of the Swedish Museum of Natural History. The diffraction techniques he brought to Sweden later attracted the interests from people such as Gösta Phragmén and Arne Westgren, whom Aminoff mentored. Aminoff was elected in 1933 as a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. He was awarded the Björkén Prize in 1935 along with Arne Westgren. A mineral found by Aminoff in Långban's mine in Värmland has been named after him as aminoffite.