of a book. Georg Wilhelm Timm was born on 9 June 1820 in
Riga. His father, Friedrich Gottfried Timm (1779–1848), was the mayor of Riga. His sister, Emilie, misfortunately married and then divorced the painter
Karl Bryullov in 1839. His first art studies were in Riga, then he went to Saint Petersburg, where he enrolled as a "foreign student" at the
Imperial Academy of Arts. His primary instructor there was the battle painter,
Alexander Sauerweid. He was awarded two silver medals and graduated in 1839 with the title of "Artist". Five years later, thanks to an Imperial scholarship, he went to Paris where he worked under the direction of
Horace Vernet, also a battle painter, and made a visit to
Algiers. Upon his return to Paris, he began exhibiting at the
Salon where he attracted critical praise. The onset of the
French Revolution of 1848 forced him to return to Saint Petersburg, where he was initially employed as an illustrator; notably for the works of
Faddey Bulgarin and
Nikolay Gretsch. He worked primarily in the media of lithography and woodcuts and was sometimes referred to as the "Russian
Gavarni". He travelled extensively throughout Russia, serving as a battle painter during the second phase of the
Caucasian War. In 1852, he accompanied Tsar
Nicholas I on a visit to Finland. Later, he made sketches in a
besieged Sevastopol. As a result, in 1855, he was named an "Academician" by the Imperial Academy. From 1851 to 1862, by leave of the Royal Family, he published the
Russian Art Gazette, which featured works by many prominent Russian artists, made into lithographs by Timm. He had to stop publishing the gazette when he began to suffer from an eye disease. In 1867, he moved to Berlin to seek treatment and took up a position as the Director of a privately operated ceramics institute. He never returned to Russia. In 1876, he was appointed a professor at the
Prussian Academy of Arts and began working at the
Royal Porcelain Factory. After his death on 7 April 1895, in Berlin, his widow donated his estate to the
Riga City Art Museum. A major retrospective was held at their new building in 1906. ==Selected paintings==