Known
nationally
for
his
sensual
figurative
paintings
Bill
Brauer
grew
up
in
Queens
New
York
knowing
from
early
inspiration
that
he
would
be
an
artist.
Brauer
attended
the
School
of
Visual
Arts
in
New
York
City
and
was
a
protegé
of
the
renowned
Federico
Castellon.
His
first
years
as
an
artist
were
spent
working
as
an
illustrator
where
competition
pushed
Brauer
to
apply
his
intellect
and
imagination
rigorously
to
his
work
to
out-think
other
artists
of
this
profession.
He
feels
that
in
his
art
he
still
uses
the
design
concepts
he
learned
as
an
illustrator.
In
the
early
1960s
Brauer
became
involved
in
printmaking
holding
his
first
major
exhibition
in
1974
with
the
Associated
American
Artists
‘New
Talent
in
Printmaking’
exhibition.
From
this
starting
point
his
work
gained
increasing
acclaim
and
was
sought
after
for
exhibition.
His
work
was
selected
for
the
permanent
collection
of
the
Brooklyn
Museum
and
was
featured
in
the
‘19th
Annual
Print
Exhibition.’
In
1976
he
received
an
individual
grant
from
the
Vermont
Council
of
the
Arts.
Having
long
harbored
the
deep
desire
to
be
a
serious
painter
in
1978
Brauer
began
for
the
first
time
to
concentrate
exclusively
on
painting.
In
the
late
eighties
his
work
won
mounting
success
and
has
since
been
exhibited
extensively
across
the
United
States
in
both
solo
and
group
exhibitions.
Brauer’s
paintings
are
highly
sensual
and
moody
using
deep
intense
colors
and
beautifully
rendered
curves
of
fabrics
or
human
forms.
All
works
depict
women
and
are
often
suggestive
of
a
charged
and
compelling
narrative.
In
an
interview
with
‘The
Sunday
Times
Argus
’
Brauer
says
“I
love
the
concept
of
mystery.
I
like
the
idea
that
something
is
taking
place
off
the
picture
plane.”
For
twenty-five
years
Brauer
has
taught
an
art
class
which
now
meets
at
Vermont
College
Montpelier.
The
innumerable
drawings
he
has
sketched
from
these
classes
eliminate
a
need
for
models
when
he
paints.
“This
way
[the
paintings]
take
on
their
strangeness
their
edge
”
he
says
“because
they’re
not
from
models.”
He
estimates
that
he
produces
around
twenty-five
to
thirty
paintings
a
year.
Brauer’s
most
recent
solo
exhibitions
have
been
at
the
Patricia
Rovzar
Gallery
Washington
and
The
Chase
Gallery
Boston.
He
continues
to
be
one
of
Vermont’s
most
successful
artists
highly
popular
with
private
collectors.