Wilhelm Sauter was a German painter, especially known for his war paintings. After his graduation from school he went to Heidelberg in 1913 in order to become a schoolteacher for art education. After outbreak of World War I he became a soldier in the GermanInfantry Regiment No. 169 in Lahr in 1915. One year later, he was deployed at the Somme near Serre. He was buried alive by an exploding artillery shell and partially lost his sense of hearing. His war experiences later became the basis for his most famous works. After a stay in the military hospital, he got employed at the Volksschule in Bruchsal. From 1918 to 1920 he studied at the Badische Landeskunstschule in Karlsruhe. Among his professors were Karl Eyth, August Groh, Walter Conz and Friedrich Fehr. After his graduation he was a schoolteacher in Villingen, Bruchsal, Karlsruhe, Weinheim and Ladenburg. At the instigation of Hans Thoma there was the first exhibition of Sauter's works at the Karlsruher Kunstverein. In the 1920s Wilhelm Sauter got married. One of his sons died of diphtheria when he was 14 years old. Wilhelm Sauter created a lot of portraits, pieces of landscape art and pictures of soldiers in different situations. He used the technique of painting as well as drawing and etching. Between 1924 and 1927 he created six drypoint illustrations to Grimmelshausen'snovelSimplicius Simplicissimus. Especially his war paintings attracted the attention of the Nazis. His pictures were shown at different exhibitions, e.g. at the exhibition Heroische Kunst in Berlin in 1935, at the Badische Gaukulturschau in 1937, several times at the Große Deutsche Kunstausstellung in the Haus der Deutschen Kunst in Munich or at the Venice Biennale in 1942. His war paintings of this time are less dismal but more heroic than his former works. The Badisches Armeemuseum in Karlsruhe purchased some of Sauters works, as well as Adolf Hitler and Fritz Todt. In 1939 Wilhelm Sauter was awarded the Gaukulturpreis. In 1941 he was appointed to a professor at the Hochschule der bildenden Künste in Karlsruhe, which was the former Badische Landeskunstschule where he had studied. He worked there until 1945.