Richard Yarde was born in Boston and lives in Northampton Massachusetts. He has been a signal presence in the New England art world since the mid-1960s. He received a B.F.A. cum laude and a M.F.A. from Boston University. He has trained generations of young artists at a succession of colleges and universities and has been Professor of Art at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst since 1990. His own work has enriched our sensibilities as he charted a unique watercolor style. Solo and group exhibitions throughout the country have featured his paintings, which reside permanently in nearly three dozen public collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution; and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Yarde tackles the traditionally intimate art of watercolor with uncharacteristic bravado. Unlike oil or acrylic painting, watercolor brooks no mistakes. Yet Yarde paints on a heroic scale with dazzling color, rich symbols and deeply evocative imagery. Critics have written – and Yarde concurs – that his body of work has been an exploration of his own history. Early on he painted with joy and verve. He would splash the Roxbury neighborhood where he grew up in the 1950s on large sheets of paper, then turn to rendering imagined scenes from the vibrant jazz world of the Harlem Renaissance.
Yarde tackles the traditionally intimate art of watercolor with uncharacteristic bravado. Unlike oil or acrylic painting, watercolor brooks no mistakes. Yet Yarde paints on a heroic scale with dazzling color, rich symbols and deeply evocative imagery. Critics have written – and Yarde concurs – that his body of work has been an exploration of his own history. Early on he painted with joy and verve. He would splash the Roxbury neighborhood where he grew up in the 1950s on large sheets of paper, then turn to rendering imagined scenes from the vibrant jazz world of the Harlem Renaissance.
