{"title":"David Yarrow","description":"\u003cp\u003eDavid Yarrow (b. 1966) is now recognized as one of the world`s best-selling contemporary artists. He has achieved worldwide fame for his photographs of life on earth. His distinctive style has earned him an ever-growing following among art collectors. Yarrow is represented by some of the best contemporary art galleries in the world and is also a global brand ambassador for UBS and Nikon Europe. He is also engaged with and in ambassadorial roles for various charities in many areas, such as “Best Buddies,” one of the most established American children’s charities. Yarrow recently launched a podcast called “In Focus with David Yarrow”. He shares exciting insights and behind-the-scenes stories of his wide range of work, from his world-famous wildlife shots far from civilization to staged pictures of notable celebrities and models. His work focuses on philanthropy and conservation themes, which he skilfully integrates into his visual language. His powerful images of animals in the wild, charging across barren landscapes, are just as captivating as the celebrities he stages, such as Cara Delevingne or Cindy Crawford. David Yarrow takes the viewer on distant journeys and shows him the impressive beauty of life in all its facets, standing out from the documentary style of his contemporaries and surprising them with unusual perspectives and precise lighting.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e\u0026nbsp;\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e.\u0026nbsp;\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"btn_container\"\u003e\n\u003ca href=\"https:\/\/petragut.com\/pages\/installations-david-yarrow\" title=\"David Yarrow Installation views\"\u003eInstallation views\u003c\/a\u003e\u003c!--\u003ca href=\"\/de\/blogs\/news\/tagged\/david-yarrow\" class=\"boxed-btn btn\"\u003eNews\u003c\/a\u003e--\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"btn_container\"\u003e\n\u003ca href=\"https:\/\/artspaces.kunstmatrix.com\/en\/exhibition\/11468644\/david-yarrow-st-moritz-2023\" title=\"David Yarrow Installation views\"\u003eonline exhibition\u003c\/a\u003e \u003c!--\u003ca href=\"\/de\/blogs\/news\/tagged\/david-yarrow\" class=\"boxed-btn btn\"\u003eNews\u003c\/a\u003e--\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","products":[{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-untouchables-2","title":"The Untouchables 2","description":"THE UNTOUCHABLES\u003cbr\u003e Amboseli, Kenya - 2017\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e I take most of my elephant images in Amboseli for three reasons, all of which helped make this image work. The first\u2028is that the flat and arid topography of the park—and particularly of the dry lake outside it—lends itself not only to clean backdrops, but also to good predictive analysis of elephant movement. The second is that I can get out and about and set up remotes without infringing upon any laws or endangering myself. Third, the elephants in Amboseli, just like in Tsavo, can be very big. I really don’t look outside of Kenya for elephants; it is the home of the big tuskers.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e This was one of my most coveted images in 2017, and the limited-edition prints of it sold out within a year.\u2028That sort of demand always suggests a special image. I want to take pictures that stop people in their tracks. An American friend of mine in the fashion industry refers to it as a “Kennedy Dead” photograph or headline. This is a “Kennedy Dead” photograph.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e In truth, it is a lucky shot on the widest-angle lens I have—the 20mm. The subject needs to be close, otherwise it\u2028will always be “loose,” and this requires a great deal of predictive analysis and good fortune. I am clearly not with the camera!\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e The composition is an act of god,\u2028but I am willing to take it—the frame within the frame. The big bull had to block the late-afternoon sun or there was no picture. He kindly did that, which allowed the lighting to be energetic and dramatic. The whole picture—almost full frame—will never be repeated.\u2028This immersive study of the elephant kingdom is a complete one-off.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 104 cm (image size) | 132  x 142 cm (framed size) | Signed by the artist on front","offer_id":41917117923415,"sku":null,"price":32400.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 160 cm (image size) | 180  x 198 cm (framed size) | Signed by the artist on front","offer_id":41917117956183,"sku":null,"price":37800.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_165_The-Untouchables-2_132x142_fb1d6ece-06d3-4f69-bec4-f412fb31cfb0.jpg?v=1754932310"},{"product_id":"substitute-concatenate-g1215-d1215","title":"The Bills III (Colour)","description":"THE BILLS\u003cbr\u003e The Flying D Ranch, Southwest Montana, USA – 2021\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e The concept of this photograph has been on my wish list for many years. A group of male bison charging through heavy snow, directly towards a camera is certainly a rare sight and it always seemed a bridge too far from almost every perspective. The question has always been where and how could this epic scene unfold in front of a camera?\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e Yellowstone National Park was never going to be the answer.  This sort of collective behaviour does not tend to happen in the park and if it did, there would be zero chance of being in the right place at the right time to film it. It is difficult to break new ground in Yellowstone.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e In 2020 an American artist, John Banovich, an exceptional talent and good friend, suggested that I approach Ted Turner to see if I could gain access to his stunning 180 square mile ranch - Flying D - saddling Yellowstone and neighbouring Big Sky. This remarkable place is nine times the size of Manhattan and showcases Montana at its most stunning best.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e John’s wonderful painting of a group of running bison adorns the wall of the main reception of the exclusive Yellowstone Club and he took his inspiration from spending time at Ted Turner’s ranch.  I recognised that this was a link worth pursuing. Flatteringly, a few months after my initial approach, the Turner team agreed to collaborate in the hope that we could raise money for Ted’s conservation initiatives.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e Ted Turner is one of America’s biggest landowners and also one of its most acclaimed conservationists and he reintroduced both bison and wolves into Flying D, one of his three Montana ranches. In mid-winter, his team of ranchers will herd some of the 5,000-resident bison into areas where feeding is easier and this controlled activity creates an opportunity to work a situation.  Just like cowboys herding their cattle in Texas, the skill sets of the Turner ranchers in deep snow are a privilege to watch.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e The difficulty is that bison in this vast ranch are more skittish of humans on foot than their Yellowstone cousins, who see thousands of tourists every day.   I therefore needed either to be camouflaged or out of sight as they made haste in my direction. Luckily the Flying D team knew of a group of rocks behind which I would be obscured from the bison’s line of sight.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e After many a failure, and some adjustments to the approach, one gorgeous winter morning in February, we achieved what we set out to do. It was a real team effort and I want to thank John Banovich and the whole Turner Corporation team at the Flying D.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"132 x 292 cm (image size) | 132 x 292 cm (framed size)","offer_id":42702768472151,"sku":"DY-PHO-The Bills III (Colour)-132 x 292 cm (image size) | 132 x 292 cm (framed size)-OPEN-A","price":26500.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_237_The_The_Bills_2_102x200_a990c524-6dd5-4c16-ba57-e47b8c0895ce.jpg?v=1776235469"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-florida","title":"Florida","description":"FLORIDA\u003cbr\u003eOkeechobee, Florida – 2026\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eEvery state in America has its own unique characteristics that shape outsiders’ perceptions: New York is the world’s business epicenter; Texas has cowboys and oil; whilst Alaska is the final frontier. Our cognitive processing tends to elicit visual symbolisms that are consensual - mention the word “Nevada” and we think of gambling in a desert.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eBut Florida is more complicated. It cannot be conveniently categorised or boxed. On the coast is Miami, with its tourist beaches, Art Deco, influencers, pop culture and Hispanic soul. Then up the road is Palm Beach with its genteel “Slim Aarons” high-society life of golf, tennis, bridge and cocktails.\nThe two communities could not be more different in culture and ethnicity.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThey only have two things in common: favourable taxes and proximity to America’s Jurassic Park - an untamed territory that remains primeval and largely closed for business. The swamps of Florida were not made for human life, yet they sit within 30 miles of two of the most evolved and desirable places to live in the world. It is as stark a visual dislocation as there can be.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eIn no part of America does the price of real estate fall quicker than when travelling west from the Atlantic beaches of southern Florida. There are too many insects and far too many dangerous reptiles for sane mankind.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThe emblematic beast of Florida is the alligator and for the 56,000 students at the University of Florida, life would be different if “Gators” did not exist. The big gators in the swamps are formidable adversaries.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThis photograph was only captured after considerable research and conversations with those familiar with the location. The camera was controlled remotely, and no one was in danger during this project. Alligators are much more comfortable living in this part of Florida than humans will ever be.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eIf Florida was fictional, we would laugh at its absurdity. And yet it is very real.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 142 cm (image size) | 132 x 180 cm (framed size)","offer_id":42717025730647,"sku":"DY-PHO-Florida-94 x 142 cm (image size) | 132 x 180 cm (framed size)-N\/A","price":42400.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 213 cm (image size) | 180 x 251 cm (framed size)","offer_id":42717025763415,"sku":"DY-PHO-Florida-142 x 213 cm (image size) | 180 x 251 cm (framed size)-N\/A","price":34980.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}]},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-gathering-storm","title":"Gathering Storm","description":"THE GATHERING STORM\u003cbr\u003e\nAmboseli, Kenya 2012\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe evening that I returned from taking this photograph on the scorched earth of the dry Lake Amboseli, I was told by the local guide that the light conditions that afternoon were as dramatic as he could remember. The thunderstorms build in late October and this is also the time when the elephant herds can be at their biggest. They complement each other perfectly. In the craft of coupling powerful content with emotive aesthetics, this image is about as good as I can do. I remember having a few celebratory drinks that night.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"76 x 130 cm (image size) | 114 x 168 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43899368702039,"sku":"DY-PHO-Gathering Storm-76 x 130 cm (image size) | 114 x 168 cm (framed size)-N\/A","price":12720.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"114 x 196 cm (image size) | 153 x 234 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43899368734807,"sku":"DY-PHO-Gathering Storm-114 x 196 cm (image size) | 153 x 234 cm (framed size)-N\/A","price":15900.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_014_gathering_storm_114x168_20Kopie.jpg?v=1779814084"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-bc-10000","title":"BC 10'000","description":"10,000 BC\u003cbr\u003e\nTanzania - 2019\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThis is the first photograph that I have taken of a big Nile crocodile that is strong enough to be released as a print. It’s taken me 30 odd years, but in crocodile years that is nothing. These monsters were around long before man and can live to 100 years old.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nBig crocs are not easy to capture in a way that conveys their enormity, their primeval menace or indeed their textural magnificence. But this image works and when I saw it in large size at the printers in LA, my heart skipped a beat. It has been worth the wait. I think we pushed a few boundaries here.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThe picture was made as opposed to taken as I had a preconceived idea of what I was trying to do. The starting point was my acceptance that head on images of crocodiles struggle as there is never enough depth of field with a telephoto to do them justice. The teeth can be in focus, but then probably not their eyes and certainly not their back or tail. I don't like to have my focal point half way back in an image - it creates a tension point if the nearest point of a portrait is out of focus. A head on portrait fails to convey length and length is the key variable.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI kNew I needed to work at 90 degrees, with the croc perpendicular to the camera. I also wanted to be low and close and I wanted a big crocodile - why on earth photograph a small one? If almost all of the crocodile was the same distance from the camera, there could be a colossal amount of information in the image.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nOur research - and we did a great deal - led us to one place. The key was that the river had to be narrow, as for safety reasons I could not work from the same bank as a 12 foot crocodile - that could be my last assignment. The narrow Grumeti river in Tanzania offers chances and there is one 200-yard section with some enormous crocs on the south bank with a north bank just 20 yards away. The steep bank deters crocodiles on the north bank and that was what I needed to be able to work without fear and for the camera angle to be low. I needed to be at the same height as the croc - give or take a meter.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThe image was taken late in the day and the angle of the late sun gave me every chance for a clean picture - almost all the background was in heavy shadow and three stops underexposed.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e \n\nMy preoccupation as an artist is to be original and creative. We often fail and disappoint ourselves, but this photograph is kind of cool. I haven't really seen a similar image and we do put in the hours trawling the net. I had the right camera, the right lens and the right exposure. Phew!\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThis scene could well have happened 10,000 BC - but we will never know. It did, however, happen in 2019, and that is for the record.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"76 x 188 cm (image size) | 114 x 226 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43899381317719,"sku":"DY-PHO-BC 10'000-76 x 188 cm (image size) | 114 x 226 cm (framed size)-N\/A","price":26500.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"102 x 251 cm (image size) | 140 x 290 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43899381350487,"sku":"DY-PHO-BC 10'000-102 x 251 cm (image size) | 140 x 290 cm (framed size)-N\/A","price":31800.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}]},{"product_id":"substitute-concatenate-g1179-d1179","title":"Get the Fxxx Off My Boat (Colour)","description":"GET THE FXXX OFF MY BOAT\u003cbr\u003e Marina del Rey, LA, California - 2021\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e My first collaboration with the real Wolf of Wall Street - Jordan Belfort - in the autumn of 2019, resulted in the coveted image -The Wolves of Wall Street. That photograph has now sold out and I was honoured that both Leonardo DiCaprio and Martin Scorsese signed a copy which sold for $200,000 at Art Miami at the end of that year.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e It was always our intention to do a sequel, but Covid put paid to that in 2020. However, the delay gave me time to consider various options for the story line and fine tune logistics. The unanimous choice for round two was to shoot the boat scene with the FBI agents.  For many it is the most memorable scene in the whole movie and of course there is intense competition for that top spot.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e In May of this year we had an opportunity to shoot our sequel off the coast of Marina del Rey in Los Angeles.  I had so much more light to play with than in the dealing room shot and my instinct was to be bold in the amount of content I could include in one frame.  Indeed, I had to work on the basis that the one frame had to tell the full story, otherwise the job would not have been done properly.  This is one of the challenges of still photography.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e Once we sourced our necessarily large yacht, I pondered intensely over the make up of the content and the composition of that content. The wolf would always be the centre stage, but the layered nature of the front of the boat offered my best chance of an expansive narrative around and behind the wolf.  My favoured shooting time was an hour before sunset and from mid afternoon I had built up an intricate story board in my mind.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e About 6.45pm out on the open sea, all the constituent parts came together and I think everyone involved should be proud of the role they played in creating the parody. I would contend that if any one of the constituents of the photograph was removed, the picture would be materially lessened. It needed the giant lobsters; the spray of the champagne; the FBI; the helicopter; both wolves and even the girl on the top deck.  Luckily they were all on board - this was not a day to have after thoughts.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e They say that the best pictures can be looked at for a long time. Well here we go. My thanks to everyone involved but especially Jordan Belfort, Kate Bock, Josie Canseco and FBI agents Bradley Thomas and Kether Parker.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e We will also be releasing a colour version of this image. In addition, we would like to be clear that the “wolf” in the scene is actually a Tamaskan dog - which is 98% wolf. The lobsters are all cooked lobsters bought from a restaurant.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 132 cm (image size) | 132 x 170 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43899420180567,"sku":"DY-PHO-Get the Fxxx Off My Boat (Colour)-94 x 132 cm (image size) | 132 x 170 cm (framed size)-N\/A","price":61480.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_221_Get_the_fxxx_off_my_boat_94x132_eaa21370-a201-4798-888d-1adb4dec2158.jpg?v=1779817540"},{"product_id":"substitute-concatenate-g1180-d1180","title":"Get the Fxxx Off My Boat (Colour)","description":"GET THE FXXX OFF MY BOAT\u003cbr\u003e Marina del Rey, LA, California - 2021\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e My first collaboration with the real Wolf of Wall Street - Jordan Belfort - in the autumn of 2019, resulted in the coveted image -The Wolves of Wall Street. That photograph has now sold out and I was honoured that both Leonardo DiCaprio and Martin Scorsese signed a copy which sold for $200,000 at Art Miami at the end of that year.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e It was always our intention to do a sequel, but Covid put paid to that in 2020. However, the delay gave me time to consider various options for the story line and fine tune logistics. The unanimous choice for round two was to shoot the boat scene with the FBI agents.  For many it is the most memorable scene in the whole movie and of course there is intense competition for that top spot.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e In May of this year we had an opportunity to shoot our sequel off the coast of Marina del Rey in Los Angeles.  I had so much more light to play with than in the dealing room shot and my instinct was to be bold in the amount of content I could include in one frame.  Indeed, I had to work on the basis that the one frame had to tell the full story, otherwise the job would not have been done properly.  This is one of the challenges of still photography.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e Once we sourced our necessarily large yacht, I pondered intensely over the make up of the content and the composition of that content. The wolf would always be the centre stage, but the layered nature of the front of the boat offered my best chance of an expansive narrative around and behind the wolf.  My favoured shooting time was an hour before sunset and from mid afternoon I had built up an intricate story board in my mind.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e About 6.45pm out on the open sea, all the constituent parts came together and I think everyone involved should be proud of the role they played in creating the parody. I would contend that if any one of the constituents of the photograph was removed, the picture would be materially lessened. It needed the giant lobsters; the spray of the champagne; the FBI; the helicopter; both wolves and even the girl on the top deck.  Luckily they were all on board - this was not a day to have after thoughts.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e They say that the best pictures can be looked at for a long time. Well here we go. My thanks to everyone involved but especially Jordan Belfort, Kate Bock, Josie Canseco and FBI agents Bradley Thomas and Kether Parker.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e We will also be releasing a colour version of this image. In addition, we would like to be clear that the “wolf” in the scene is actually a Tamaskan dog - which is 98% wolf. The lobsters are all cooked lobsters bought from a restaurant.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"142 x 201 cm (image size) | 181 x 239 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43899420246103,"sku":"DY-PHO-Get the Fxxx Off My Boat (Colour)-142 x 201 cm (image size) | 181 x 239 cm (framed size)-N\/A","price":72080.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_221_Get_the_fxxx_off_my_boat_94x132_c918363d-c428-446e-adc5-dc7829a4fd17.jpg?v=1779817552"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-person-of-interest-montana","title":"Person of Interest, Montana","description":"PERSONS OF INTEREST\u003cbr\u003e Montana, USA – 2021\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e Even those that don’t follow the NFL, or have an interest in the performing arts, know and admire Ciara and Russell Wilson for what they stand for and what they do for others. They are both legends in their respective careers, but their legacy may lie in what they have done to champion and support good causes helping others living less than ideal lives.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e For this shoot, I took the Seattle Seahawks quarterback and his wife to my favourite shooting location in the world - the Pioneer Bar - high up in the mountains of West Montana. I wanted to be in command of as much as possible and with my intimate knowledge of the location, I knew I could muster together a smorgasbord of western archetypes to complement the rock star American couple. I also know the lighting and the angles inside out. It was a home fixture for me.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e My preconception was to build a vignette that lived and breathed cinema whilst playing on the importance of cultural refinement in the Wild West. To that end, I thought it would be playful to dress Russell and Ciara in black tie so as to accentuate the narrative. Finding the extras was easy - they are mostly my drinking buddies.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e There are no weak characters in this shot; there is simply no room for them. In fashioning together so many ethnicities, I hope his photograph celebrates the diversity of America and reminds us that the pursuit of the American Dream was, and is, inclusive.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e Revlon Ambassadors have been filmed in many locations, but perhaps none offer the storied past of the Pioneer Bar. Ciara smashed this look, but I soon discovered, she kind of smashes every look.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"181 x 292 cm (framed size) | Signed by the artist on the front","offer_id":43899429126231,"sku":"DY-PHO-Person of Interest, Montana-181 x 292 cm (framed size) | Signed by the artist on the front-N\/A","price":37100.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_224_Person_of_20_Interest_132x206_e3ba4a1a-1c15-4044-9045-f33a83076e5e.jpg?v=1779818354"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-high-noon","title":"High Noon","description":"High Noon\u003cbr\u003eLimited Edition Photography by David Yarrow, for sale at Petra Gut Contemporary gallery in Zurich and St. Moritz\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eMount Moran in the Tetons offers as good a mountain backdrop as I know in America. In the winter, in particular, it has a grandeur that is difficult to match.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThe lake below this section of the Tetons is frozen thick in mid winter and offers the perfect stage on which to tell stories, but we are always mindful that on a good day, the whole scene become too bright within 45 minutes of sunrise. Images like this require very early starts and we are always in position well before dawn.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThe Native Americans were introduced to horses by early Spanish immigrants and they adapted quickly to the optionality and mobility given to them by horses. The Comanche in the south became a feared and dominant tribe largely because of their horsemanship skills.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThis frame - taken on a very cold morning in Wyoming - simply pays homage to a tested partnership that played a material role in shaping 19th century American history.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 142 cm (image size) | 132 x 180 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910376456279,"sku":"DY-PH-High Noon-94 x 142 cm (image size) | 132 x 180 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":21200.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 213 cm (image size) | 180 x 251 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910376489047,"sku":"DY-PH-High Noon-142 x 213 cm (image size) | 180 x 251 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":28620.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_229_high_noon_132x180_9557a2ca-9c30-4ba9-a5ed-c954e5381f61.jpg?v=1780072877"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-maradona-colour","title":"Maradona (colour)","description":"Maradona (Colour)\u003cbr\u003e Mexico – 1986\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e We recently showed this well known photograph at an event in Los Angeles and it received considerable interest and therefore we have decided to release the print as a one sized limited edition. The timing is appropriate too, as the documentary film - Diego Maradona - directed by Asif Kapadia has recently been released to international acclaim.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e The photograph was taken on film way back in 1986, so the quality is not quite what can be achieved today. Nevertheless, it captures an historic moment in time and Diego Maradona will always be an iconic figure in the history of the beautiful game.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e I still remember the day as if it were yesterday and I was so fortunate to have my moment in the complete chaos after the trophy presentation when 5,000 Argentinian fans ran widely amongst the players and the press corp. Maradona, riding high on Argentinian shoulders, looked straight at me - arms aloft with the trophy in his right hand. Little did I know, then as a 20 year old, that I had a photograph that would stand the test of time.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"76 x 114 cm (image size) | 114 x 152 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910376521815,"sku":"DY-PH-Maradona (colour)-76 x 114 cm (image size) | 114 x 152 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":47700.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_230_Maradona_Colour_114x152_c19be58b-5a50-462d-b4e1-3efaae72ec36.jpg?v=1780072891"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-contentment","title":"Contentment","description":"Contentment\u003cbr\u003eSnow Hill, Antarctica – 2010\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eI am often asked why I almost always print in black and white and this image offers many of the answers.  Andy Warhol said that his favourite colour is black and his other favourite colour is white. Matisse said that it took him 40 years to work out that the most powerful colour is black. In between black and white there is a huge tonal range - it is rather like a piano with 88 keys. This image in Antarctica employs all that piano.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eWe live our lives in colour, so a departure from literal reality is refreshing and allows for an abstraction - less perhaps is more.  The lines and curves also allow for this simple family unit to be an art work rather than a National Geographic image.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThere is a peaceful serenity to the story - and one that resonates with all that relish the simple joy of togetherness.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"112 x 94 cm (image size) | 151 x 132 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910376718423,"sku":"DY-PH-Contentment-112 x 94 cm (image size) | 151 x 132 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"168 x 142 cm (image size) | 180 x 206 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910376751191,"sku":"DY-PH-Contentment-168 x 142 cm (image size) | 180 x 206 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":33920.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_013_contentment_150x132_cd7e41d0-5b7b-4e9d-9667-9b09181abf38.jpg?v=1780072913"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-charge","title":"Charge","description":"Charge\u003cbr\u003e\nLewa, Kenya - 2013\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nIn my time at the Lewa Conservancy in Kenya, I principally focused on photographing the white and black rhinos for which the reserve is famous. Telephoto shots of static rhinos are hardly ground-breaking and my goal was to work with remotes in the hope of capturing a rhino charging towards the camera in its casing. There should be menacing proximity. However this approach did present some practical challenges – the grass is quite long in Lewa and therefore the ground level camera’s view can often be obscured and why also should a rhino run towards a steel box? After many failures we got there in the end – the key decision being to cover the camera in the rhino’s own defecation – they like their own smell.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI feel comfortable in my assertion that this angle of view makes the image fairly unique. It is a high-impact photograph of a magnificent and gravely endangered animal.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 112 cm (image size) | 132 x 150 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910376849495,"sku":"DY-PH-Charge-94 x 112 cm (image size) | 132 x 150 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":12720.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 168 cm (image size) | 180 x 208 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910376882263,"sku":"DY-PH-Charge-142 x 168 cm (image size) | 180 x 208 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":20140.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_018_charge_132x150_f08610dd-875c-48ce-b0f0-6f49797f1545.jpg?v=1780072935"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-grumpy-monkey-colour","title":"Grumpy Monkey (colour)","description":"Grumpy Monkey (colour)\u003cbr\u003eJigokudani National Park, Japan – 2013\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e The Snow Monkeys three hours west of Tokyo are accessible even in winter and it is difficult to capture fresh detail. This picture, on a bleak and cold winter’s day, probably works because everything about it is miserable to the point of being comical. The misty and dank weather matches the Snow Monkey’s mood. I had no light to play with and this is technically reflected in the lack of depth of focus. I am flattered that so many people adore this picture – maybe it says a little bit about us?","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"84 x 127 cm (image size) | 122 x 165 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910376980567,"sku":"DY-PH-Grumpy Monkey (colour)-84 x 127 cm (image size) | 122 x 165 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":21200.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"127 x 191 cm (image size) | 165 x 229 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910377013335,"sku":"DY-PH-Grumpy Monkey (colour)-127 x 191 cm (image size) | 165 x 229 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":28620.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_489_grumpy_monkey_20_colour_122x165_10327d86-f8be-4034-bf77-700fb78274ac.jpg?v=1780072957"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-jungle-book-stories","title":"The Jungle Book Stories","description":"The Jungle Book Stories\u003cbr\u003e Ranthambore National Park, India - 2013\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e There are only about 1,700 Royal Bengal Tigers left in India – a frightening decline from the estimated 100,000 during the Raj. Therefore, to find a father and son bathing in the same pool in the jungle was statistically unlikely. Photographers cannot direct wild tigers and thus the positioning of the animals relative to the surroundings or each other is matter of luck. Overtime, luck will average out, but the placement of the adult tiger’s left ear covering his son’s right eye enhances a picture which evokes jungle book stories. I like the lone eye to the right – even though it’s outside my focal plane, it ironically grabs our focused eyes.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 94 cm (image size) | 132 x 132 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910377439319,"sku":"DY-PH-The Jungle Book Stories-94 x 94 cm (image size) | 132 x 132 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 142 cm (image size) | 180 x 180 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910377472087,"sku":"DY-PH-The Jungle Book Stories-142 x 142 cm (image size) | 180 x 180 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":33920.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_062_jungle_book_stories_180x180_9e540247-0872-49fb-b893-4395c6e8f431.jpg?v=1780072978"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-killer","title":"The Killer","description":"The Killer\u003cbr\u003e\nRanthambore National Park, India - 2013\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nSince 2010, this handsome man-eating tiger has killed two villagers in Rajasthan, but T24 – as he is unimaginatively known – is still revered locally. Our brief encounter at fifteen feet was a piece of huge luck because tigers are now so rare, and they are even rarer in a backlit watering hole at sunrise. They are magical animals and the chance to take a portrait in a dark water environment free of any tension points was a moment of great fortune. In twenty eight hours of driving around Ranthambore with the most experienced of guides, this was my only encounter of any note with India’s most magnificent animal. This powerful tiger portrait will stand the test of time – I know that simply because I know that I can’t really do much better, and I do always want to do better.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 152 cm (image size) | 132 x 193 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910377570391,"sku":"DY-PH-The Killer-94 x 152 cm (image size) | 132 x 193 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 234 cm (image size) | 180 x 272 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910377603159,"sku":"DY-PH-The Killer-142 x 234 cm (image size) | 180 x 272 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_023_the_killer_132x193_0aed0755-f783-496e-b108-fb10174743bc.jpg?v=1780072997"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-killer-colour","title":"The Killer (Colour)","description":"The Killer (Colour)\u003cbr\u003eRanthambore National Park, India - 2013\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nSince 2010, this handsome man-eating tiger has killed two villagers in Rajasthan, but T24 – as he is unimaginatively known – is still revered locally. Our brief encounter at fifteen feet was a piece of huge luck because tigers are now so rare, and they are even rarer in a backlit watering hole at sunrise. They are magical animals and the chance to take a portrait in a dark water environment free of any tension points was a moment of great fortune. In twenty eight hours of driving around Ranthambore with the most experienced of guides, this was my only encounter of any note with India’s most magnificent animal. This powerful tiger portrait will stand the test of time – I know that simply because I know that I can’t really do much better, and I do always want to do better.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 152 cm (image size) | 132 x 193 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910377930839,"sku":"DY-PH-The Killer (Colour)-94 x 152 cm (image size) | 132 x 193 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":31800.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 234 cm (image size) | 180 x 272 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910377963607,"sku":"DY-PH-The Killer (Colour)-142 x 234 cm (image size) | 180 x 272 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":39220.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_602_the_killer_colour_132x193_234a6216-bac7-45b6-9ac9-973e1a67bd4d.jpg?v=1780073018"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-puzzle","title":"The Puzzle","description":"The Puzzle\u003cbr\u003e Lewa, Kenya – 2013\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e Zebras are not photographers’ friends. They couple a rather clumsy running style with skittish nerves and herd instincts. In some parts of Sub-Saharan Africa it is very difficult to get close and after a while, there are few photographers that have the will-power to bother. The Grevy’s Zebra of East Africa offers the best chance of proximity and also – by good fortune – the best facial aesthetics. I knew what I was looking for with this animal – it was all about the lines and the patterns within a small group and then hoping the light would help. I knew as soon as I pressed the shutter that I had finally got the image.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 109 cm (image size) | 132 x 60 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910378487895,"sku":"DY-PH-The Puzzle-94 x 109 cm (image size) | 132 x 60 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 168 cm (image size) | 180 x 206 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910378520663,"sku":"DY-PH-The Puzzle-142 x 168 cm (image size) | 180 x 206 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":26500.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_033_the_puzzle_180x206_f8074c14-b801-40b3-bd88-3621985b8747.jpg?v=1780073039"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-desert-flight","title":"Desert Flight","description":"Desert Flight\u003cbr\u003e\nAmboseli, Kenya - 2014\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nIn my mind, the zebra is the hardest animal in Africa to photograph well – particularly when they are on the run. This is for two reasons: firstly, they are extremely skittish and tend to run away from a cameraman long before he has found himself in a position to capture a special moment. Secondly, zebras can be ungainly when they run – it is all legs, arse and tail. There is little in the way of grace.\nEqually portraits of stationary zebras have to have strong composition of their stripes to elicit attention. The world does not need another dull, full-frontal zebra shot taken with a long lens. That is simply pulp.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThere is nothing ungainly about this zebra’s flight path and they can certainly shift. I was lying flat in the baking dirt to achieve the right perspective – no other angle would suffice. The laundry bill was worth it.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe picture will carry resonance for those with an interest in photographic history. It was, after all, an early photograph that proved unequivocally that a horse runs with all four feet off the ground. The same is certainly true of the zebra.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"64 x 157 cm (image size) | 102 x 196 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910379339863,"sku":"DY-PH-Desert Flight-64 x 157 cm (image size) | 102 x 196 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"94 x 236 cm (image size) | 132 x 274 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910379372631,"sku":"DY-PH-Desert Flight-94 x 236 cm (image size) | 132 x 274 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":24380.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_017_desert_flight_132x274_81002921-1343-4940-8c97-efd156b675ee.jpg?v=1780073060"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-hoof-it","title":"Hoof It","description":"Hoof It\u003cbr\u003e\nAmboseli, Kenya – 2014\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI am flattered that this image of a nineteen-foot high giraffe running towards me on the dry bed of Lake Amboseli truly grabs the attention of those that chance upon a limited edition print. I kNew I had a cracking picture after I breathlessly picked myself up from the arid ground immediately after this brief encounter. The angle of view and the composition is close to perfect and that is presumably what engages the buyers of the work. There are generic giraffe pictures and then there is this. It transcends the banal and I am proud to have taken it.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nAmboseli is the perfect canvas on which to tell stories because it is flat, elemental and free of distractions. The lack of noise emboldens this image – it is unequivocally all about a giraffe – albeit a large adult one, moving at a fair speed. The picture could have been taken anytime over the last 10,000 years.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThere is another helpful component to this photograph in that the soft early morning light offers a calm and detailed portrayal of this majestic animal. If the giraffe was harshly sunlit – from either behind or from in front, I think the image would be too busy and have far less soul. As it is, this is all about the surreal subject matter, not the real weather.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI will always remember the first time I showed a big print of this to anyone. It was in Upper East Side, New York at a famous French restaurant. The owner – who has long been a reputable collector of photographs – was spellbound and I was humbled as he gathered his friends and family around the print. Today, this imperious giraffe looks down on everyone that is eating at his iconic lair.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"137 x 94 cm (image size) | 175 x 132 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910379405399,"sku":"DY-PH-Hoof It-137 x 94 cm (image size) | 175 x 132 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":21200.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"208 x 142 cm (image size) | 246 x 180 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910379438167,"sku":"DY-PH-Hoof It-208 x 142 cm (image size) | 246 x 180 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":28620.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_022_hoof_it_176x132_960c625d-ded1-4457-9efc-992e5b5e4b83.jpg?v=1780073080"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-lion-king","title":"Lion King","description":"Lion King\u003cbr\u003eDinokeng, South Africa – 2014","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"102 x 94 cm (image size) | 140 x 132 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910379503703,"sku":"DY-PH-Lion King-102 x 94 cm (image size) | 140 x 132 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"154 x 142 cm (image size) | 193 x 181 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910379536471,"sku":"DY-PH-Lion King-154 x 142 cm (image size) | 193 x 181 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":31800.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_019_lion_king_152x142_438cac45-9c4b-4c77-ad61-4042d7ab62a3.jpg?v=1780073101"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-mankind","title":"Mankind","description":"Mankind\u003cbr\u003e\nYirol, South Sudan - 2014\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nHuman documentation can have an uncomfortable proximity, simply because we understand more about the subject than we could ever do with animal wildlife. I have long wanted to travel to the cradle of mankind and immerse myself in a daily life that, whilst alien to us, is still human life.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nIn my view, the rawest place left on earth is South Sudan, which is still recovering from a shocking civil war. The logistics and regulatory red tape involved in travelling 200 miles north of its capital, Juba, on water- ravaged roads to photograph a previously unfilmed Dinka cattle camp, were formidable. Equally, I kNew that these hurdles precluded most sane people from entertaining the idea and that I therefore had a chance of capturing something special and fresh.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI had a preconception of the image that I wanted to return home with: something that conveyed the raw enormity of a Dinka cattle camp in an elemental and biblical setting, something timeless and vast. Like a Rembrandt, I wanted people to be able to look at the picture and find New stories each time.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI was, indeed, the first photographer to visit this 5000-strong cattle camp, and I felt a responsibility to get it right. The Dinka were fascinated by my skin and my hair; indeed, many of the children had never seen a white man. They did not care about my cameras: cows are their passion.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI brought pictures of Highland cows from Scotland as well as local cow medicine. I won the crowd, as they were transfixed by the Highland cow images and grateful for the medicine.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nOn that glorious evening, 28 December 2014, I did a good job and the two days on a shocking road followed by hours of walking in 42-degree heat and then wading through four feet of water known to house the odd Nile crocodile, were worth it. No other film maker has managed to get to this location. After an unnerving, chest-deep re-crossing of the river at dusk, the rest of the long journey home seemed to go quickly. I kNew what I had on my memory card and I was elated and excited. I could not wait to show people.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nIn retrospect, I did one clever thing; I brought a ladder because I wanted to silhouette any key detail against the smoke, which the Dinka create to fend off mosquitos, rather than against the setting sun. The smoke gives a sense of place and an ethereal countenance. Mankind is heavenly on one glance and Dante’s Hell on the other.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nIt was a long way to take a ladder, perhaps further than anyone has ever taken a ladder in Sudan. The Dinka looked at it as if it were a freak of engineering. What a good decision that ladder turned out to be. I will never reveal this exact destination to anyone: why would I?","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 117 cm (image size) | 150 x 305 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910380748887,"sku":"DY-PH-Mankind-94 x 117 cm (image size) | 150 x 305 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_010_mankind_160x300_4301cb85-f923-459c-a766-970e947ad539.jpg?v=1780073114"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-no-nearer","title":"No Nearer","description":"No Nearer\u003cbr\u003e Zambezi National Park, Zambia – 2014\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e The hippopotamus is an extremely difficult animal to photograph in a way that is either different from the generic “mouth open” offerings, or in a way that truly portrays an adult’s bulk and menace. They are extremely dangerous animals and it is foolhardy to get too close. This is as close as I ever want to come to a protective adult – particularly when I am in the water. Hippos kill 3,000 people a year in Africa.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e There is a haunting intensity to this image – and it has an almost hypnotic pull that draws our eyes back time and time again to the adult’s eyes. Her eyes convey many emotions – protection, anger and alertness, whilst I am sure my eyes at the time just conveyed fear. She probably weighed the same as 20 adult men combined.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e The baby hippo also offers great context to the enormity of an adult’s face. The early morning light and the adult’s wet face combine to offer detail on a facial bone structure that is bordering on prehistoric and quite without equal. I am so proud of this picture, which was taken just 20 minutes before I had to leave the Zambezi to find my way home. The previous few days had yielded nothing.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 163 cm (image size) | 132 x 200 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910381633623,"sku":"DY-PH-No Nearer-94 x 163 cm (image size) | 132 x 200 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":18020.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_021_no_nearer_81x117_875e0a97-900f-48c9-bb9a-e02ab66e39f2.jpg?v=1780073129"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-bagheera","title":"Bagheera","description":"Bagheera\u003cbr\u003e\nSouth Africa – 206\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nWhen I took this photograph, I had no immediate strong feelings about it,\nand I certainly did not imagine that it would become as popular as it has been. It was not an image that I dwelled over in the evening or played with on my computer. In my view, it was just Ok, though I kNew it was sharp.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nBut when I saw it printed large for the first time at the studio in Los Angeles, there was something that allowed it to hold the eye. It’s the black curves that\ndo it—they are the feature that permits\na simple picture to rise above the mundane. Sometimes a print disappoints and sometimes it raises the experience— this was the latter, which is unusual. My team is tough in the studio.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nIt is the magnificence of the cat that is key. I just happened to have the very best equipment and to be in the right place at the right time. Rich blacks tend to work in considered photography.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe best color to work against\nblack is white or off-white, and this is where the image becomes a little special. I had pursued the leopard for an hour\non foot, always circumventing to get ahead. The big moment could have come against any backdrop. The leopard posing against the light in tall wispy grass was the best possible outcome. While luck is “the residue of design,” I totally acknowledge that this is a lucky image. But then again, who cares?","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 132 cm (image size) | 132 x 170 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910382518359,"sku":"DY-PH-Bagheera-94 x 132 cm (image size) | 132 x 170 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 201 cm (image size) | 180 x 239 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910382551127,"sku":"DY-PH-Bagheera-142 x 201 cm (image size) | 180 x 239 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":26500.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_035_bagheera_180x239_dfaf02e7-2fdc-4e96-be68-ceb1873311f1.jpg?v=1780073150"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-hello","title":"Hello","description":"Hello\u003cbr\u003e\nKaktovik, Alaska - 206\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nOn one unforgettable August evening in the North Slope of Alaska, I was offered a spectacularly close encounter with a group of polar bears. In the modest village of Kaktovik, I worked with two locals who had a boat license to trawl along the land slip. They kNew the topography of the area intimately and I had briefed them on my style which favoured height alignment and close proximity. However, they also work within strict safety laws and are absolutely forbidden to approach or harass the bears. They can stay still and allow the bears to approach them, so long as they are protected by the hull of their little fishing boat.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI trusted my Inuit guide - he had a weathered and wise countenance and spoke with such familiarity on each bear we saw from our little boat. After two hours of trawling the land strip one evening, the big moment arrived and on reflection I did the very best I could do given the special scene that unfolded in front of me.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThis image was run in the British press a few days after my encounter on Barter Island. It is something of a platitude to say that the bigger an image is printed, the greater the detail, but on this occasion it is very pertinent for two reasons.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nFirstly, a polar bear is a huge animal. If possible, any portrait should reflect this.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nSecondly, the bear is pin sharp around its eyes. I think that I must have been as close to a polar bear as is possible in the wild and lived to tell the tale. I was also using Nikon’s flagship 58m lens, which captures every hair at the assigned focal point. When the first large print of the image came off the drum in La, one of the team turned to me and said, ‘David, look at the eyes – you are in them!’. He was right; I had inadvertently taken a selfie through the eyes of a polar bear.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 152 cm (image size) | 132 x 191 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910382616663,"sku":"DY-PH-Hello-94 x 152 cm (image size) | 132 x 191 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":34980.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 231 cm (image size) | 180 x 269 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910382649431,"sku":"DY-PH-Hello-142 x 231 cm (image size) | 180 x 269 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":42400.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_008__20hello_132x191_6bad010b-0437-4113-8082-8f9a90bf80ae.jpg?v=1780073171"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-hello-colour","title":"Hello (Colour)","description":"Hello (Colour)\u003cbr\u003eKaktovik, Alaska – 2015\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThis image was run in the British Press a few days after my encounter on Barter Island. It is a special picture and I guess it will become a well-known picture. It is something of a platitude to say that the bigger an image is printed, the greater the detail, but on this occasion it is very pertinent for two reasons.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eFirstly, a polar bear is a huge animal. If possible, any portrait should reflect this and – in this case – given that it is a head on shot, that is easy. The bear’s head in the image should be at least life size – if not more.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eSecondly the bear is pin sharp around its eyes. I think that I must have been closer than just about anyone has ever been to a polar bear in the wild and lived to tell the tale. I was also using Nikon’s flagship 58m lens – which captures every hair at the assigned focal point. When the first large print of the image came off the drum in La, one of the team turned to me and said “David, look at the eyes – you are in them!”. He was right; I inadvertently took a selfie through the eyes of a polar bear. That surely is groundbreaking.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 152 cm (image size) | 132 x 191 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910383861847,"sku":"DY-PH-Hello (Colour)-94 x 152 cm (image size) | 132 x 191 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":34980.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 231 cm (image size) | 180 x 269 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910383894615,"sku":"DY-PH-Hello (Colour)-142 x 231 cm (image size) | 180 x 269 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":42400.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_568_hello_colour_132x191_e9549524-abfa-4e29-9d10-578b4d54aa9c.jpg?v=1780073193"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-ride-the-ghost-train","title":"Ride The Ghost Train","description":"Ride the Ghost Train\u003cbr\u003e\nGhost Town, USA – 206\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nFor reasons I struggle to articulate, I have always been drawn to ghost towns. But having fulfilled this desire, I have been disappointed in the reality because invariably the lure of tourism has necessitated some immediately obvious modernity in the architecture. There are, however, a few villages from the gold rush in America that remain as they were left and after exhaustive field work, I found the best final frontier ghost settlement imaginable. I cannot reveal the destination for obvious reasons, but I persuaded the local government to open up the fenced off historic site for me.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nIt was a treasure trove of artifacts from 100 years ago – and best of all, there was a railway station and an abandoned carriage. Inside the carriage there was a surreal canvas on which to tell a story – snow on the rotten seats, broken windows and a central corridor strewn with the remnants of decades of decay.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nOn my first reconnaissance to the site, I saw the possibility of telling a story, but in a dreamy creative moment I thought I might need a wolf and some brave girls. It took some time to get all the logistics in place and I then needed the support of some talented and adventurous locals. We needed to shoot early for the light to be right and for the temperature to drop well below freezing – the wolf’s breath makes such a difference to the story within the picture and would not have been possible after the light and temperature had risen.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI am proud of this shot largely as it is difficult to know how it could be bettered. It is a reward for homework and logistical precision, but it is also testament to the animal handling skills of two people that were in the carriage that the lens could not see. This image will never, ever, be recreated.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 157 cm (image size) | 132 x 196 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910384353367,"sku":"DY-PH-Ride The Ghost Train-94 x 157 cm (image size) | 132 x 196 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":16960.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 239 cm (image size) | 180 x 277 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910384386135,"sku":"DY-PH-Ride The Ghost Train-142 x 239 cm (image size) | 180 x 277 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":21200.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_006_ride_the_ghost_train_132x196_9465d55b-9cd4-440f-b020-e7c566c9a8a2.jpg?v=1780073214"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-circle-of-life","title":"The Circle of Life","description":"The Circle of Life\u003cbr\u003e\nAmboseli, Kenya – 206\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\t\n\nAmboseli on the Kenyan-Tanzanian border is one of the best canvases to work with in the world. The amphitheatre has an elemental starkness that suits my clean, ground-up style of photography – the backdrops are rarely that busy in this arid dustbowl. The name Amboseli means ‘place of dust’ and that is instructive. It is just a flat and raw terrain, albeit nestling below the towering Mount Kilimanjaro.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI go to Amboseli for one principal purpose – to work close to elephants as they cross the dry Lake in search of water in the park. When a big herd crosses, it is as serene a spectacle in the natural world as I have ever come across. That is why Amboseli holds such a special place in my heart. It offers the chance to capture evocative imagery of elephants in a barren and remote wilderness.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nTen years ago, lake crossings of large herds were common, especially at the end of the summer dry season when the surface water was scarce and the elephants travelled from the Kilimanjaro foothills across the lake for the remaining sources of water. There is no greater friend to a wildlife photographer than repeat or predictable animal behaviour. With the first rains arriving in late October, there were rarely tourists around and it often felt as if I had exclusive access to write the stories for the ‘daily elephant News’. The evening skies would often have a menacing, dark countenance, which complements the scorched earth below.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nBut recently the elephant behaviour in Amboseli has been affected by the growing number of Masai moving to the area with their cattle. This has impinged on the elephants’ way of life as cattle come with human tenders and also attract more lions. We were told as kids that elephants have great power of memory and, increasingly, there must be a disconnect between their memories and the current habitat. They are unsettled by change and Amboseli is changing.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e \n\nFor three years I had not seen a big herd cross the lake and my regular guide has started to greet me at the landing strip with eyes of resignation. He knows what I want and this means working out of the jeep, on the ground on the dry lake, with a big elephant herd approaching. Since 2013, I had not had the privilege of seeing this and I have certainly put the hours in. There have been special vignettes with giraffes, zebras, wildebeest and small elephant groups, but no big elephant crossings.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e \n\nUntil, in October 206, in the middle of the day, my ‘look out’ scout saw something that had the shape of a big herd starting to cross the lake. They may have been five miles from his vantage point, but through his binoculars his premise was confirmed; the herd numbered over 25 and was the biggest group the locals had seen for sometime. Being outside normal filming time, I was sitting writing at my camp when the News came back to me. I was only wearing loafers and casual clothes but there was no time to change and I picked up my cameras and we drove the seven miles in record time.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e \n\nAs we sped to the west side of the dry lake, I was emotionally focused but equally aware that the light was patchy, with the sky dominated by localised rain cloud. I kNew that this could complement any ground content perfectly: much better to have threatening clouds at midday than a high sun.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThose 20 minutes I spent that Sunday with the herd were spectacular. One image The Circle of Life stood out and the reaction from people honed in on the image’s grace and serenity. The composition has spirituality to it and, in retrospect, I made good quick decisions on both camera bodies and lenses. The photograph has a very good chance of passing the test of time. The detail is pleasing and the composition is a gift that perhaps the hours of persistence deserved.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 160 cm (image size) | 132 x 178 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910385303639,"sku":"DY-PH-The Circle of Life-94 x 160 cm (image size) | 132 x 178 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":44520.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 244 cm (image size) | 189 x 249 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910385336407,"sku":"DY-PH-The Circle of Life-142 x 244 cm (image size) | 189 x 249 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":44520.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_022_circle_of_life_132x199_90bb912b-78e0-40e0-ba25-b407777551ef.jpg?v=1780073234"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-waterboys","title":"The Waterboys","description":"The Waterboys\u003cbr\u003e\nAmboseli, Kenya - 206\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nAs a result of the poor accord between cattle and elephants in Amboseli, there are not many cameras that have had this awesome scene in their line of fire over the last three years and I consider myself privileged. Equally, I have put in the time and know the area as well as any film maker. Looking at my notes, I have been on this lake on 47 occasions in the last three years and this is one of the biggest herds that has crossed during my visits. When our look out scouts saw the opportunity, we reacted very quickly. I don’t think that my guide and friend – Juma Wanyama – has ever driven quicker from base to the lake.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI think that big pictures need either transcending content that engages across much of the print, or the use of space to create a distinct sense of place. The Waterboys is a hybrid of these two dynamics – the herd offers as magnificent an animal collective as today’s natural world can offer – big tuskers in good numbers with their young. As the affiliated photographer for Tusk, the Uk based conservation charity, I have witnessed some desperate sights in sub­Saharan Africa – no more so than the field operation on a rhino named ‘Hope’ after she had been butchered to within an inch of her life by poachers. But there are also uplifting stories and the stability of the elephants in Amboseli is one – only one elephant from a resident population of 1,200 has been killed by poachers this year.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e \n\nThis image is a product of not just the elephants, but also the sky. My camera metadata informs me that it was taken at 11.50 am – possibly about the worst time to photograph anything near the equator – high midday suns are not a camera­man’s friend. On this day, however, the sky was full of fluffy cloud cover and the light was not stark, but contextual. The darker rain clouds were also starting to assemble – as often happens at lunchtime at the start of the rainy season. This was good fortune, but that is also why I regard late October in Amboseli as prime season.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThis is the best place in the world to photograph African elephants, as emphatically demonstrated by The Waterboys. It is a timeless image that I cherish.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 183 cm (image size) | 132 x 221 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910385827927,"sku":"DY-PH-The Waterboys-94 x 183 cm (image size) | 132 x 221 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":15900.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_032_the_water_boys_132x221_d18296f8-6d88-4cf0-a858-1c6dccf3ab50.jpg?v=1780073248"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-desert-army","title":"Desert Army","description":"Desert Army\u003cbr\u003eAmboseli, Kenya – 2020\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e This is what Amboseli has to offer and when it does, I think it is unrivalled as a spectacle in the natural world. A battalion of elephants in one seamless, cohesive unit charging through the desert. To see this scene played out is a real privilege and one that should always get the adrenaline flowing.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e I find myself reaching for military metaphors, but this spectacle is accompanied by an eerie silence and the serenity of the desert is not compromised. I sense that The Desert Rats, the byname for the 7th Armoured Division, would have made more noise in their celebrated campaign against Rommel in North Africa in 1941.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e The photographer’s job, when encountering such a desert army of elephants, demands quick thinking on positioning and a really strong relationship and understanding with his driver. We have been in this situation a few times and one potential variable is now a constant - we use a 200mm lens. Anything shorter is too loose and going for more compression risks cutting off some of the army.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e This is not an easy image to capture and I did have a cigar that night. Maybe like General Harding or indeed General Rommel.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 147 cm (image size) | 132 x 185 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910385958999,"sku":"DY-PH-Desert Army-94 x 147 cm (image size) | 132 x 185 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":31800.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 221 cm (image size) | 180 x 259 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910385991767,"sku":"DY-PH-Desert Army-142 x 221 cm (image size) | 180 x 259 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":39220.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_158_desert_army.jpg?v=1780073270"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-face-off","title":"Face Off","description":"Face Off\u003cbr\u003e\nAlaska, USA - 2016\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e \n\nThis powerful portrait of a huge coastal brown bear in Funnel Creek, Katmai National Park, Alaska works because of the eye to eye face off. My eye is level or indeed marginally lower than his and that required getting very wet. There are few dry days in the field in Alaska and this was not one of them.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nOver and above our matching line of vision, the simplicity of the image is helped by the absence of distractions - there is clearly nothing in the print that is not part of the bear itself. A corner of distant tundra or sky would disturb the sense of the complete and create an eye grabbing tension point. This effect is only really possible with a “head on” perspective and it shows the vastness of adult bears. This bear probably weighed 950 pounds - five times that of an average man.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nEncounters like this tend to be singular moments - with no other photographers nearby. In the popular bear viewing locations of Alaska, overzealous park wardens would impose unnecessary distance restrictions and the close proximity that allowed for this detail would be impossible. In the salmon run seasons, great precision is required to know where the salmon are running on any particular week - with that comes clues as to where to find the bears. The greater the number of salmon in the river, the less a bear will worry about human presence; my trespass - once acknowledged - was accepted and life carried on. This bear was simply being a bear - he posed no threat.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"81 x 89 cm (image size) | 119 x 127 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910386647127,"sku":"DY-PH-Face Off-81 x 89 cm (image size) | 119 x 127 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"122 x 132 cm (image size) | 160 x 170 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910386679895,"sku":"DY-PH-Face Off-122 x 132 cm (image size) | 160 x 170 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":23320.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_012_face_off_119x127_1a3dab62-05f5-45d3-beb4-e342d0da3cae.jpg?v=1780073291"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-giraffe-city","title":"Giraffe City","description":"Giraffe City\u003cbr\u003e\nAmboseli, Kenya - 2016\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThe shimmering heat of the high sun, the mirage behind the giraffes, and\nthe composition itself combined to create an almost surreal image. It was an “animal Broadway” or an “animal Times Square” in the heat of East Africa. I had never had this number of giraffes all within 100 yards of me.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThe composition fell kindly, but I had to be patient to allow the two lead players to be as close to me as possible. This was not my first rodeo. I also firmly believe that giraffes are best photographed in the company of other giraffes, and in an exclusive collective in a setting as raw and elemental as Amboseli, they remind us just how remarkable our planet is. Unless something lurks deep in the Costa Rican jungle, giraffes are the least vertically challenged species of all.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nAs I have mentioned throughout this book, I have an obsession with focus. If an image is not pin sharp because of camera shake or a poor use of focal point, there tends to be no picture. This photograph when printed large looks like there\nmay be a focus issue, but it’s actually the heat—that’s something of a first for me.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nAmboseli can be very hot—indeed the name means “place of dust.” The irony is that for most of 2018 and early 2019 there was so much rainfall that the dry lake on which this image was taken actually returned to being a lake. Those who know this area well would know this image could not have been taken during that period. Weather patterns are never constant here, and I have long given up trying to preplan trips on the basis of what is traditionally the dry or wet season. It is what it is.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 152 cm (image size) | 132 x 191 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910386778199,"sku":"DY-PH-Giraffe City-94 x 152 cm (image size) | 132 x 191 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":15900.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_021_giraffe_city_132x191_91eb81d6-ca45-4c32-8f4a-2837dcd3c8cf.jpg?v=1780073305"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-one-for-the-road","title":"One For The Road","description":"One for the Road\u003cbr\u003e Tanzania – 2020\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e My favourite quote on photography is so simple. It comes from the mind of a greatly respected Nat Geo cameraman, Jim Richardson. He said “If you want to be a better photographer, stand in front of more interesting stuff ”.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e It seems so banal, but it is also “bang on”. The lens may look both ways and the photographer’s soul, ability and experience plays a big role, but let’s face it, the lens looks outward more than it looks inward. Not even Ansel Adams could have taken a new picture of the Eiffel Tower that the world needed to see.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e I take no credit for this image. It may be quite extraordinary and may never be seen again, but all I had to do was point my camera lens at the subject. So who is to credit?\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e I would give credit to my intelligent guide in the eastern Serengeti - Leverd Mgomwende and also the conservation NGOs in Tanzania and beyond who are helping the lion survive. Lions are under huge pressure and this is an uplifting photograph. Most of all though, I dedicate it to my long term friend - South Africa’s Kevin Richardson. He is the lion’s champion in Africa and that is quite a responsibility.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e I see 20 lion at the bar. That’s just nuts.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"56 x 178 cm (image size) | 94 x 216 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910386810967,"sku":"DY-PH-One For The Road-56 x 178 cm (image size) | 94 x 216 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":21200.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"81 x 259 cm (image size) | 119 x 297 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910386843735,"sku":"DY-PH-One For The Road-81 x 259 cm (image size) | 119 x 297 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":33920.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_145_One-for-the-road-94x216.jpg?v=1780073326"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-departed","title":"The Departed","description":"The Departed\u003cbr\u003e\nMkomazi Game Reserve, Tanzania - 2016\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThis impactful image taken late one afternoon in Mkomazi Game Reserve in Tanzania has a level of simplicity that belies the complications in its capture. I can see no better way of conveying the power and prehistoric face of a rhinoceros than using a wide-angle lens with a remote control body strategically placed on the ground in the predicted path of a rhino.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThis approach has a high failure rate – if it didn’t, there would be more pictures knocking around like The Departed and I can’t find a single one. Not only is the image pin sharp, but also the rhino is totally uninfluenced by the camera on the ground – he is being a rhino, not a model for a photo shoot. The focus was set to manual and the light prejudged, so there was a great deal left to chance, but equally I had been working on attaining an image like this for four years. Remote control work is an art in itself and over the years I have learnt a great deal. It is a cognitive process that leans mostly on analysis of previous misjudgements.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThe key is to be ambitious in setting the focus no more than three feet from the camera. This will then give the head of the animal a disproportionate amount of the frame. It is a low percentage approach, but then again who wants to deal with high percentage photography? That’s a little dull.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nTony Fitzjohn is a legend in East Africa. Only a rare few have had feature films telling their story and he is one. ‘To Walk With Lions’ documented his early days with George Adamson in Kenya and his move to Mkomazi. He knows black rhinos well and knows this one particularly well. This proved to be of critical importance in predetermining the position of the camera relative to the watering hole (over the years much of my work with rhinos has involved the calculating use of watering holes). Without him, I had no chance of taking this image and I am so grateful for his advice and support.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nTanzania has shocking history of tolerance to poaching and since the 1970’s, the rhinoceros population has fallen from 3000 to just 90. Only recently has this troubled country become more progressive in conservation, but it may well be too late.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nSo this image is rare on two levels. Firstly, it depicts one of the 90 remaining black rhinos in the country and how spiritually uplifting to have captured him in seemingly the very best of form. Secondly it does this with a spectacularly rare angle of view.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThis image is called ‘The Departed’ to honour the 99% of rhinos in Tanzania that have indeed departed, just as in the Oscar winning film with the same title – very few are left at the end to tell the story. What a dreadful legacy of our tenancy of this planet and only a few men like Tony can possibly save the rhinoceros from extinction in Tanzania.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 113 cm (image size) | 132 x 151 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910387662935,"sku":"DY-PH-The Departed-94 x 113 cm (image size) | 132 x 151 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 171 cm (image size) | 180 x 209 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910387695703,"sku":"DY-PH-The Departed-142 x 171 cm (image size) | 180 x 209 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":20140.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_034_the_departed_132x151_f98014b9-53a8-487c-96ad-d13f7f251897.jpg?v=1780073346"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-morning-show","title":"The Morning Show","description":"The Morning Show\u003cbr\u003e Kenya – 2020\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e A glimpse of a moment caught on my remotely controlled camera. The lioness who accompanied the lion then went off with the camera.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e It’s all about the small things and because all this happened just before 6.50 am, there was enough morning dew to give the lion’s mane a tiny rinse.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e We recovered the camera some time later and it was quite a thrill to see the last image the bitten camera had taken. Remotes are a low percentage play, but when they come off and the subject is looking strong, they transcend hand held work because of the proximity and the angle of view.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e He really did put on The Morning Show.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e There is no doubt that this photograph will be in much demand. I certainly want it for my wall.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"99 x 94 cm (image size) | 137 x 133 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910387892311,"sku":"DY-PH-The Morning Show-99 x 94 cm (image size) | 137 x 133 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-Nr. 2","price":37100.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"150 x 142 cm (image size) | 188 x 180 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910387925079,"sku":"DY-PH-The Morning Show-150 x 142 cm (image size) | 188 x 180 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":44520.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_147_The-Morning-Show_137x133_e3ba1d5e-9151-4ad4-9a64-0b2eb465dcb7.jpg?v=1780073368"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-siberians","title":"The Siberians","description":"The Siberians\u003cbr\u003e  Harbin, China - 2016\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e    There are very few wild Siberian tigers left in China, perhaps fewer than 40, but there are conservation centres where the tigers are protected and breeding programmes have been successfully introduced. If it were not for these centres, the animals would be extinct, so people who talk rather too emotionally about ‘wild or not wild’ are missing the point. The tigers in these conservancies are not tame – they will eat a man in a heartbeat – but they are protected and looked after in their natural habitat. It is not a zoo but it is safe acreage for magnificent animals. Conversely, it is not safe acreage for humans and security is extremely tight.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e    In January this year, I travelled to Harbin in North East China, reputedly the coldest major city in the world in winter months. Indeed, when I arrived, the temperature was -35 degrees. The area has a tiger conservancy so sightings are guaranteed.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e    I hired a fixer and an interpreter, and we went, bearing gifts, to the breeding-centre manager in his office. I showed him my work with lions and elephants, and also my image that President Xi had received during Prince William’s state visit in the summer. I had no idea what the manager was saying but safety clearly came first in his mindset. It was clear there was no way I was getting out of a vehicle – he made a munching expression with his face and I got the gist. He agreed, however, to me sitting in a vehicle with removable windows and the biggest possible gap between the cage bars, big enough for my camera but not a tiger’s head. The interpreters also arranged for radio contact between my driver and the principal feeder of the tigers, who brings the tigers sheep, deer and chickens to eat, and throws them out of the back of his 4 x 4 in a hurried manner that hints of a few scary moments in the past.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e    The first day in the park was used for scouting. It was freezing but I needed to spend time finding a hill and then think about the hill versus the position of the cold winter sun, and where our bashed-up vehicle with my eight-inch gap could sit comfortably on an icy slope and capture a collective of tigers.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e    I watched the tigers around that hill on the first morning and I saw an opportunity, but I needed big depth of field, which removed the possibility of using any telephoto lenses. It was clear that I was going to have to be very close and looking uphill with a standard lens or an 85m. Then we just had to work with nature and be patient.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e    The second day was again a freezing -25 degrees, but that was exactly what I wanted. I needed a picture before 10am, as after that the winter sun is not kind enough for group portraits, so this meant working at the coldest part of the day. We had bought 25 chickens and the driver spoke constantly on his radio to the tiger feeder about what we were looking for. It was clear from their heated exchanges that this was a first for them. It was a partnership between me and four Chinese people: the driver, the feeder and his assistant and, most importantly, the interpreter.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e    The Siberians is a big moment in my journey. It is visceral and demands attention. As someone said to me soon after I took it, there is a deadly serenity to the image. I could not have expressed it better myself. Pleasingly, all the tigers are pin sharp, so I got my maths right. Indeed, it almost looks like the cover of an Hbo boxset. As with The Sopranos, I hope they all become stars. They made a great picture for me that day in North East China.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 175 cm (image size) | 132 x 208 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910388514903,"sku":"DY-PH-The Siberians-94 x 175 cm (image size) | 132 x 208 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":37100.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 257 cm (image size) | 180 x 295 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910388547671,"sku":"DY-PH-The Siberians-142 x 257 cm (image size) | 180 x 295 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":44520.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_517_the_siberians_132x208_88f627f1-95a3-4595-a798-0fc4700c7997.jpg?v=1780073387"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-78-degrees-north-colour","title":"78 Degrees North (colour)","description":"78 Degrees North (Colour) \u003cbr\u003e  Svalbard, Norway - 2017 \u003cbr\u003e \u003cbr\u003e    There is no doubt in my mind that this photograph of a big male polar bear lends weight to the contention that wildlife photography does not have to be reportage—it can be art. The photograph is elevated rather than weakened by the negative space and the bear’s anonymity. Since 2011, I have spent more than 30 days shooting in Svalbard, and this is my favorite image of a polar bear in this part of the Arctic. Indeed, the more I look at it, the prouder I am. As my fellow Scottish photographer and friend the great Harry Benson once said, “Great images can never be repeated.” Others will decide if this is a great image, but it certainly won’t be repeated. The distinctive pads on the sole of his foot immediately grab the eye. The central pad, which resembles the Nike “swoosh,” is the epicenter of a photograph that owes its differentiating content entirely to this right foot. The image is made complete by its own lack of completeness; the storytelling is started by the camera and finished by the viewer. We are asked to finish the story, not just read it, and the spartan economy of the narrative helps along the way. Less is more in the Arctic. Its beauty is in its simplicity and the enormity of the white detail. It conveys a true sense of place. \u003cbr\u003e \u003cbr\u003e","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 145 cm (image size) | 132 x 183 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910388809815,"sku":"DY-PH-78 Degrees North (colour)-94 x 145 cm (image size) | 132 x 183 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":63600.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 221 cm (image size) | 180 x 259 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910388842583,"sku":"DY-PH-78 Degrees North (colour)-142 x 221 cm (image size) | 180 x 259 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":71020.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_445__2078_degrees_North_Colour_132x183_fb48a9cf-2d64-49c7-b130-b0eecf9b0273.jpg?v=1780073407"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-78-degrees-north-ii","title":"78 Degrees North II","description":"78 Degrees North II\u003cbr\u003eSvalbard, Norway - 2017\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cbr\u003e\nI should start by saying that I have generally been disappointed by my own work with polar bears in Svalbard. I haven’t tended to do them or their habitat justice. This is a “Giants’ Kingdom” and my images from previous trips have been too marginal to do either the giants or their kingdom justice. Luck evens itself out, but nature can seem cruel in its distribution of content and in this barren archipelago, I don’t recall many favours until June 2017.\nThis year, however, I did have some luck and came home with three images. There is no doubt in my mind that this photograph of a big male polar bear lends weight to the contention that wildlife photography does not need to be reportage – it can be art. The photograph is elevated by the negative space and the bear’s anonymity rather than weakened by it. Since 2011, I have spent over 30 days shooting in Svalbard and this is my favourite image of a polar bear in this part of the Arctic – indeed the more I look at it, the more proud I am. As my fellow Scottish photographer and friend, the great Harry Benson, once said “great images can never be repeated”. Others will decide if this is a great image, but it is certainly not going to be repeated.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe eye is immediately grabbed by the detail we recognise but have perhaps never seen – the distinctive pads on the sole of his foot. The central pad, that resembles the Nike style “swoosh”, is the epicentre of a photograph that owes its differentiating content entirely to this right foot. The image is made complete by its own lack of completeness – the storytelling is started by the camera and finished by the viewer. We are asked to finish the story, not just read the story and the Spartan economy of the narrative helps us along the way. Less is more in the Arctic – its beauty is in its simplicity and the enormity of the white detail. It is not a noisy place – in fact it is characterised by the lack of noise. The image pays homage to that variable – it conveys a true sense of place. This is not a natural human habitat – it is in fact our final frontier.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe irony was that it was the very last of a sequence of 60 images I took of the polar bear. A second after this moment, this most solitary of predators was over the horizon and our paths will never cross again. I did not press the trigger with this image in mind – it was such an intense 6 minutes that it would be most disingenuous to suggest that it was preconceived. The heart was beating too fast to consider creating art – these moments sometimes just happen. It was only when I returned to the ship, that I realised I had an extremely evocative photograph.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 145 cm (image size) | 132 x 183 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389039191,"sku":"DY-PH-78 Degrees North II-94 x 145 cm (image size) | 132 x 183 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 221 cm (image size) | 180 x 259 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389071959,"sku":"DY-PH-78 Degrees North II-142 x 221 cm (image size) | 180 x 259 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":71020.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_001_78_degrees_north_II_180x259_9bce772f-5de3-4d5b-98e2-0e6b85054978.jpg?v=1780073428"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-american-idol","title":"American Idol","description":"American Idol\u003cbr\u003e\nYellowstone National Park, USA 2017\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThis powerful image of a large bull bison was captured near Old Faithful in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. It is as good as I can do and probably my most impactful animal portrait for some time. The bison is an emblematic North American animal that roamed the continent millions of years before man. When fully grown, it is a massive beast that deserves our respect and recognition.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nWhen I was researching bison earlier this year, I quickly understood two things – firstly that some rogue bulls carry a serious threat if their space is invaded and secondly that the adult face is both prehistoric and enormous. The bison is all about the face and I sensed that any picture that didn’t recognise this, would miss my goals. My instincts were that the image also needed a sense of “Yellowstone in the winter” and this, combined with the need for proximity, all pointed to a ground level, remote control approach.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nTo work with ground level radio controlled cameras and a prime wide angle is very much my signature style, but it is easier with elephants in Amboseli, than bison in Yellowstone. This is not an easy location – our guide suggested that 95% of Yellowstone is out of bounds in winter. It is the most geothermally active park in the world, throw avalanches, wolves and bears into the mix and we have a primordial soup of creation.\nI failed about 10 times with my camera positioning and I tweaked my lens\/camera combination constantly. It was most frustrating and I was generally grumpy. But on the third day at about 2 pm, it all came together. The trees and the sky are most helpful additives – but what a face and what a back structure. I haven’t seen this sort of image of a big bison before.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI would like to thank Tom Murphy, one of America’s most acclaimed nature photographers, for assisting me on this assignment. We were both frustrated by the milder weather at the start of the week, but his knowledge and fireside tales of the area kept the spirits up. A good 20 years ago in the depth of a very cold winter, Tom – equipped with just a light tent – took a back country ski trip across the 100 km span of Yellowstone – a remarkable feat that truly humbles anything I have ever achieved and a trip that will soon be commemorated by a long awaited documentary film.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"95 x 94 cm (image size) | 133 x 132 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389235799,"sku":"DY-PH-American Idol-95 x 94 cm (image size) | 133 x 132 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":31800.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 140 cm (image size) | 180 x 178 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389268567,"sku":"DY-PH-American Idol-142 x 140 cm (image size) | 180 x 178 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":39220.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_015_american_idol_180x178_7be9f5f3-3c8f-48e0-9a12-9a659b033025.jpg?v=1780073450"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-encroachment","title":"Encroachment","description":"Encroachment\u003cbr\u003e\nUSA - 2017\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI probably owe a great deal to the photographer Jim Brandenburg. I have never had the privilege of meeting him, but his iconic picture of half a wolf’s head jutting out from behind a tree is widely ascribed as a key moment in the history of wildlife photography. This was the day when transcending wildlife photography started to be regarded as art.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI am a fine art photographer, not a wildlife photographer, and so I sit somewhere in the middle of this debate. I don’t use long lenses unless I absolutely have to – polar bears and tigers being two cases in which they are helpful. Telephoto lenses compress the image and with it the chance of capturing something deeply evocative.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI do find many wildlife photographs very dull. It is not enough to see an animal and then photograph it – that is akin to google mapping and it is not art. Many wildlife photographers fall into the trap of believing that documentation is enough and it is not.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThis image is deliberately reductive and there is no lofty ambition. But therein lies its strength. It is a paradox that white is such a strong colour and it is probably at its best in abstract imagery with no depth of focus. There was about an inch of focus here and it was well used.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 107 cm (image size) | 132 x 145 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389301335,"sku":"DY-PH-Encroachment-94 x 107 cm (image size) | 132 x 145 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":26500.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 160 cm (image size) | 180 x 198 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389334103,"sku":"DY-PH-Encroachment-142 x 160 cm (image size) | 180 x 198 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":33920.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_010_encroachment_132x145_eb9ae85d-e504-4c3f-9756-33dde7f0f8fb.jpg?v=1780073471"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-it-is-only-a-matter-of-time","title":"It is only a matter of time","description":"It Is Only a Matter of Time\u003cbr\u003e\nChicago, Illinois - 2017\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI have a paranoia of the mundane and maybe this picture exposes that trait.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe idea came to me as I walked back to my hotel from a charity dinner in Chicago in the autumn. I was a few glasses of red the wrong side of sober.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe city has the most visually intoxicating architecture in America and at the cross point of the river and Michigan Avenue, there is space to breathe and find a full frame, as opposed to a brutally vertical perspective. This distinguishes central Chicago from Manhattan. It is truly a stunning location, particularly at night. The incumbent Us President chose his asset location well.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nTaking my audacious and challenging preconception linearly through to its conception in the middle of a cold Chicago night involved a huge amount of team work and resolve and I thank everyone for their roles – especially the wolf and Chicago Pd. (whose charitable foundation will rightly benefit from the proceeds of print sales).\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI have closed down bars in my time, but never whole streets in a city centre. We started at 11pm and finished at 3 am.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI know there is a thin line between creative courage and insanity, but I like to push boundaries.\nIt is up to the viewer to determine my reason for the title. I could be referring to the clock in the famous neo gothic tower behind the Chicago Tribune building or indeed the onset of winter. But there is a less subliminal and rather topical message that is stamped emphatically all over the image. It is surely now “just a matter of time”.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 124 cm (image size) | 132 x 165 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389465175,"sku":"DY-PH-It is only a matter of time-94 x 124 cm (image size) | 132 x 165 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":40280.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 188 cm (image size) | 180 x 229 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389497943,"sku":"DY-PH-It is only a matter of time-142 x 188 cm (image size) | 180 x 229 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":47700.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_063_it_is_only_a_matter_of_time_180x226_2ee4c174-4d24-4e3d-8bb4-35883eabb530.jpg?v=1780073492"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-lets-catch-the-last-train-home-1","title":"Let's Catch The Last Train Home 1","description":"Let's Catch The Last Train Home 1\u003cbr\u003eMontana, USA - 2018\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nNo one is remembered for playing it safe. On the surface, the idea of placing a couple of exceptional women in front of an abandoned train in a ghost town high up in the mountains of Montana, and styling them in a way that exposes their curves as well as their personalities, is a risky concept in 2018. There is every chance that this work could be seen as gratuitous objectification and not art. It will irk many but equally, their coats were positioned very carefully.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nBut I will go with it and when I saw the print for the first time in large scale, I kNew there was something and others have reinforced this belief. It just works and the more I review the intricacy of the train’s facade, I do think that there is a little magic – the icicles, the expression of the mountain lion, the textural beauty of the wood. The girls both rock and that was not easy for them – it was 6 degrees below zero that morning.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nBut what I am trying to say? Nothing – nothing at all – I am just playing with visual double takes and remembering that the wild west was exactly that. Let’s just catch the last train home.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"132 x 94 cm (image size) | 170 x 132 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389596247,"sku":"DY-PH-Let's Catch The Last Train Home 1-132 x 94 cm (image size) | 170 x 132 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":15900.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"201 x 142 cm (image size) | 239 x 180 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389629015,"sku":"DY-PH-Let's Catch The Last Train Home 1-201 x 142 cm (image size) | 239 x 180 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":21200.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_009_last_train_home_170x132_20.jpg?v=1780073512"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-lugard","title":"Lugard","description":"Lugard\u003cbr\u003e Tsavo, Kenya - 2017\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e Great photography, more often than not, starts with great access. Access has to be found and earned; the platform for this is research. You cannot just turn up at the airport in Nairobi and say, “Take me to the biggest elephant in the world.” One of the biggest elephants is Lugard in Tsavo East. After a great deal of research, I found the only person— Richard Moller—who knew Lugard’s rough location (he is not tagged).\u2028We located him by flying a tiny plane\u2028at 200 feet above the massive Tsavo ecosystem. I also worked with the local conservation trust, and a percentage\u2028of the sales from this image will go\u2028back to protecting Lugard. I do a great deal of this now—encouraging a cash-trail partnership between the local fixer and me—especially if it has\u2028a conservation angle.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e Once we knew where Lugard was, we flew near him every day and landed on the closest bush-plane strip. Tsavo\u2028is roughly 4,600 square miles, a vast ecosystem, so working there was a continuous logistical challenge. When we reached him, he was often not in the clear. (He would be eating shrubs in a dense area, and if you surprised him,\u2028it would be game over for you.) This made remote-control work impossible and any kind of transcendent imagery very unlikely. Then one day, we got him on a mission to a watering hole and\u2028in the clear. All our thoughts revolved around his need for a drink.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e Finding Lugard was one job; getting this image was the next. It was a dangerous picture to take, as Lugard\u2028was moving with purpose and intent, and it’s not perfect, as I had two seconds to put the camera down and run like hell.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 124 cm (image size) | 132 x 163 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389694551,"sku":"DY-PH-Lugard-94 x 124 cm (image size) | 132 x 163 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":26500.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 185 cm (image size) | 180 x 224 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389727319,"sku":"DY-PH-Lugard-142 x 185 cm (image size) | 180 x 224 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":33920.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_024_lugard_132x163_0b6ed485-4a0a-47ab-9e91-6b8029dd3526.jpg?v=1780073533"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-silent-witness","title":"Silent Witness","description":"Silent Witness\u003cbr\u003e\nUSA, 2018\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n \nJanuary is my favourite month to be in America - it’s cold where you want it to be cold and it’s warm where you need warmth. Everyone is working and trying to help. In the mountains there is so much potential to play with light and line. I just sometimes wish it wasn’t quite so cold - this was bloody freezing!","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 127 cm (image size) | 132 x 165 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389825623,"sku":"DY-PH-Silent Witness-94 x 127 cm (image size) | 132 x 165 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":14840.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 193 cm (image size) | 180 x 208 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910389858391,"sku":"DY-PH-Silent Witness-142 x 193 cm (image size) | 180 x 208 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":22260.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_012_silent_witness_132x152_e5a57753-09c0-468d-8825-db3216a288c3.jpg?v=1780073555"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-factory","title":"The Factory","description":"The Factory\u003cbr\u003e\nLewa, Kenya 2017\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nAndy Warhol once said “My favourite colour is black and my other favourite colour is white”. On the basis of this alone, I fancy that this image might have struck a chord with him. I have been seeking an abstract image like this for some time and have consistently failed partly because the zebra is so skittish and this has prevented me from getting close enough to play with the patterns.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nBut the bigger issue is that if all the zebras are on the same piece of at land, as is usually the case, one animal tends to block the body of those behind. As I thought about the riddle, it dawned on me that the odds of success would narrow if I could find zebras stacked on a hill. This rules out the majority of locations because of their flat topography.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nLewa was therefore going to be my best chance of an outstanding image – there are hills and steep areas where the zebra can congregate. Of course there is no assurance that zebras will be in these areas at the same time as my camera lens. But the more time I employed the greater the chance of success.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI had then to get lucky with the formations. The grevy zebra, for which Lewa is renowned, also have such distinctive and pristine stripes that are thinner than other breeds to the south. The stripes are also very much white on a black background as opposed to black on a white coat and this works well.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nWhen this image presented itself in my viewfinder, I could not quite believe my luck. Thank goodness I remembered to press the shutter. Every grevy in the world has distinctive markings and this image makes that point with a clarity that will be difficult to beat.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 127 cm (image size) | 132 x 165 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910390054999,"sku":"DY-PH-The Factory-94 x 127 cm (image size) | 132 x 165 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":21200.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 191 cm (image size) | 180 x 229 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910390087767,"sku":"DY-PH-The Factory-142 x 191 cm (image size) | 180 x 229 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":28620.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_025_the_factory_132x168_26eec19c-43a9-4381-8277-754f96b5317a.jpg?v=1780073575"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-good-the-bad-the-ass","title":"The Good, the Bad \u0026 The Ass","description":"The Good, the Bad \u0026amp; The Ass\u003cbr\u003eNamib Desert, Namibia - 2017\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nOne of my favourite art quotes is from the legendary American photographer Diane Arbus; “A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you, the less you know.” I enjoy telling stories and am influenced by the work of Gerard Rancinan - who juxtaposes architypes and creates disorderly dreams.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nEvery so often I allow myself an indulgent assignment and try to follow a bold creative idea linearly through to conception. The final image is a result of creating a scene rather than recording a scene and this, in itself, demands a great deal of cognitive processing. Staged imagery demands exhaustive attention to detail, exactly because they are staged. The photographer cannot really blame nature for a flopped shot, as the dynamic of the random walk of nature is largely eliminated.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nOver the past couple of years, some of my more coveted work has been staged. The wolf in the bar in Montana has virtually sold out and the apocalyptical image of a gang in abandoned Detroit is now doing well. These intricate images take a restless mind to conceive and then intense emotional engagement to execute.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI was due a little self-indulgence this summer after my trip to North Korea and so several months ago we started to plan a staged shoot in the vast wilderness of the Namib Desert - surely one of the most visually intoxicating locations in the world. My concept was to build a fully stocked bar in the desert and then to fill it with a hotch potch of disconnected characters. Mad Max was set to meet Burning Man. The composition had to be painterly and perfectly backlit - and perfect lighting in the desert is no easy task.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI kNew enough fixers and friends in Namibia for the project to gain momentum. In particular, I had worked before with Namibia’s leading conservationists - Rudie and Marlice van Vuuren - who alongside many other notable endeavours, look after orphaned big cats. Their Na'an\/ Ku Se sanctuary outside Windhoek is world renowned and they are something of a golden couple in this vast but sparsely populated country. Marlice was happy to collaborate on the project and bring two of her cheetahs down to the Namib.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nAn intricate image started to emerge in my head - one that was disorderly and full of visual double takes. I am in awe of the crew, led by Alex Ames, which made the site under the hot Namibian sun and took my ever-changing directions with good humour and a smile. Finding the enormous and somewhat haunting dead tree in the desert was a key moment in our location scouting.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI think that the end result, despite the intended visual chaos, has that painterly composition that I was striving for. The fabulous Erica Lawrence from New York makes the image pure “bad ass”. Without her, we had no image. As she herself said “dope”.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 183 cm (image size) | 132 x 221 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910390710359,"sku":"DY-PH-The Good, the Bad \u0026 The Ass-94 x 183 cm (image size) | 132 x 221 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":29680.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"132 x 257 cm (image size) | 170 x 295 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910390743127,"sku":"DY-PH-The Good, the Bad \u0026 The Ass-132 x 257 cm (image size) | 170 x 295 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":34980.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_095_the_good_the_bad_and_the_ass_132x220_58f12589-fd8c-4ca3-a127-5abbd827208c.jpg?v=1780073596"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-the-old-testament","title":"The Old Testament","description":"The Old Testament\u003cbr\u003e\nSouth Africa - 2017\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThis is as good as I can do. The best ideas tend to be simple and the best photographs can often have simplicity at their heart, rather than intimacy or visual overload. The paradox is that this simple portrait was the product of fairly complex working arrangements in the field.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nUnlike many of my lion shots, this was not taken with remote controls, it was camera in hand. I was in a two-man cage, with my assistant behind me controlling the door with a rope. The minimum distance I could feel safe was about 25 feet and this required the use of a 200 mm lens – long for me, but the outstanding lens in Nikon’s telephoto range.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nIn my view, the best time to photograph lions is about half an hour after sunrise. The light gets stronger by the minute and this allows for a faster shutter speed or more depth of field. The face of the lion could not be sharper – every detail is there and he is looking right into my eyes – as he is transfixed. Three steps forward and the cage door closed and with it the opportunity.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe image is timeless and the backlit dust adds to its elemental and rather biblical mood. I thought that we should call it The Old Testament. The image was taken with the help of Kevin Richardson – The Lion Whisperer – who does more to raise awareness for the plight of the lion than anyone I know.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 94 cm (image size) | 132 x 132 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910390874199,"sku":"DY-PH-The Old Testament-94 x 94 cm (image size) | 132 x 132 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":0.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 142 cm (image size) | 180 x 180 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910390906967,"sku":"DY-PH-The Old Testament-142 x 142 cm (image size) | 180 x 180 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":44520.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_006_the_old_testament_132x132_06f0d945-f50e-4d6d-8a01-999bda724b59.jpg?v=1780073617"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-tsavo-east","title":"Tsavo East","description":"Tsavo East\u003cbr\u003e\nTsavo, Kenya - 2017\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThis magnificent old elephant is one of the planet’s few remaining big tuskers, and her tusks are also symmetrical and touch at the tips. To my knowledge, this is unique. The rangers at Tsavo found her taking shade from the midday sun\nin the heart of Tsavo East—a long drive for sure, but as long as she remained reachable, it was worth making the journey. My team was a long way from the base camp—maybe a four-hour drive.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThe difficulty was determining how to work the camera at ground level. Remotes were not an option, as there was no pattern to her movement, and a prerequisite for remotes is predictable movement from the subject.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThe next best option was to work from underneath the jeep—a potentially dangerous approach, but Richard Moller kNew this elephant had never charged and toppled a vehicle before. While there is always a first, I trusted Richard. That’s a golden rule of mine in the field—trust those you partner with on the ground, otherwise why partner with them?\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI was working with some of Nikon’s Newest equipment—the D850 and the 105mm—and the textural detail on this elephant showcases the benefit of this combination. So many things played a part in this picture—Richard, the jeep, the camera, and, most of all, the elephant. In fact, I don’t think I would even get on the medal podium. This is a high-impact portrait of a wonderful elephant in her last years.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI will never see her again.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 94 cm (image size) | 132 x 132 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910390972503,"sku":"DY-PH-Tsavo East-94 x 94 cm (image size) | 132 x 132 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":21200.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 142 cm (image size) | 180 x 180 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910391005271,"sku":"DY-PH-Tsavo East-142 x 142 cm (image size) | 180 x 180 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":28620.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_042_tsavo_east_132x132_aa4b4c94-693b-49f1-afbc-30b15d77580b.jpg?v=1780073638"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-54-degrees-south","title":"54 Degrees South","description":"54 Degrees South\u003cbr\u003e\nSouth Georgia - 2018\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nSouth Georgia is raw and exposed.\nThe mountains rise from the most intimidating of seas, and there is\na palpable feeling of life on the edge. Meanwhile, the wind on the island is often its most defining characteristic. Wind is not easy to convey in a photograph, but it’s a challenge one must take on if a true sense of place is going to be portrayed in a single still image.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e \nIt’s tough to do a good job in capturing the enormity of it all, the wind, and the sense of the final frontier. This was my best chance, as these magnificent king penguins offered scale and perspective and they were in\na perfect spot. But shooting in high\nand violent seas from a Zodiac boat in limited light is as tough as it gets.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nYou just hope that one shot comes out. I don’t think there was much skill involved—just an appetite to get soaking wet and very cold. But I have learned one important lesson over the years, and that is never to compromise on shutter speed. With modern cameras, Iso ratings must always be compromised first. A little more noise is far better\nthan camera shake, and on a boat in these seas, anything longer than 1\/2,500th of a second is dangerous. I have made too many mistakes in the past in these situations. It is so disappointing,\nas the moment is lost forever.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe high seas near land are a test\nof everything in the camera bag, but that’s good. As Wayne Gretzky once said, “You miss 100 percent of the shots you don’t take.”\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThis is not the most commercial photograph, but it was the only printable image captured from the most challenging 20 minutes of photography.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"119 x 163 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910391103575,"sku":"DY-PH-54 Degrees South-119 x 163 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":12720.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"160 x 226 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910391136343,"sku":"DY-PH-54 Degrees South-160 x 226 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":15900.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_049_54_degrees_south_119x163_1ef31b0e-adc0-4524-ae72-ac9cb039890b.jpg?v=1780073658"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-africa","title":"Africa","description":"Africa\u003cbr\u003e\nAmboseli, Kenya - 2018\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nI doubt I will ever take a more powerful portrait of either an elephant or East Africa than this one. That’s the thing about this work: it’s a collision of two enormous features—one volcanic, one iconic—and they complement each other and raise the bar higher still. It’s\na timeless piece, closer to perfection than anything I can remember in my career. The contextual narrative behind Tim, the elephant, is East Africa at its symbolic best.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThe irony is that three hours prior to taking this image, I was sitting back at the base somewhat grumpy because for once the location was not delivering. But at 2:20p.m., my team received News that our scouts had located Tim in the open, 90 minutes away, and there was a chance to do what I had always wanted to do. We grabbed our gear and made haste.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nWhen we arrived, the sun was still too high so we had to bide our time. I wanted a fresh charge, not a tired one, and that meant waiting and playing smart. We had to keep Tim at a distance, but equally keep him in our sights. It was a tactical hour ahead, and there were many people to thank for keeping their discipline and encouraging me to keep mine.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThe greatest credit for this piece of art should go not to me, but to Juma Wanyama, my local guide in Amboseli. He found and incentivized the scouts who tracked Tim, but more importantly, he kNew both this elephant and me equally well and allowed me to put myself potentially in harm’s way. Had our relationship been nascent, there is no way this picture could have been captured, because at its heart there is a triangular trust among three mammals.","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 132 cm (image size) | 132 x 170 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910391332951,"sku":"DY-PH-Africa-94 x 132 cm (image size) | 132 x 170 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":63600.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 206 cm (image size) | 180 x 244 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910391365719,"sku":"DY-PH-Africa-142 x 206 cm (image size) | 180 x 244 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":84800.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_064_africa_122x160_74a8643a-fd10-40df-807f-1214a15a5930.jpg?v=1780073678"},{"product_id":"david-yarrow-africa-2","title":"Africa 2","description":"Africa 2\u003cbr\u003e\nAmboseli, Kenya - 2018\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\nThere can be little doubt that this already well known image is a career highlight. It is unquestionably the most warmly received photograph that I have taken - so much so that the limited edition prints are nearly sold out within six weeks of capture. Manifestly, we have been able to do very little to stagger demand, including raising the price. It is what it is and the art market is exactly that - a market.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI still get goosebumps just looking at a big print. Tim is the world’s most famous big tusker - and our big Los Angeles prints have never been more necessary - why diminish Tim in print when we can surely glorify his magnificence? To find him in the open in the foothills of Kilimanjaro offered a lucky opportunity and we took it to the full.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nI will always treasure this image and I doubt I will ever take a more powerful portrait of either an elephant or East Africa. That’s the thing about this work - it’s a collision of two enormous features - one volcanic, one iconic and they complement each other and raise the bar higher still. It’s a timeless piece and closer to perfection than anything I can remember in my career. The contextual narrative behind Tim is East Africa at its symbolic best. We felt we could get away with calling the image “Africa”. It’s a dangerous title for sure, if the product is not extraordinarily special.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe irony is that three hours prior to taking this image, I was sitting back at our base somewhat grumpy that for once the location was not delivering. Indeed, I was considering leaving early, as time is money and this did not appear to be our trip.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nBut at 2.20pm, just before our flights were rescheduled, we received the News that our scouts had located Tim in the open, 90 minutes away and there was a chance to do what I had always wanted to do. We grabbed our gear and made haste.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nWhen we arrived the sun was still too high and we had to bide our time and keep our distance from Tim. I wanted a fresh charge not a tired one and that meant waiting and playing smart. We had to keep him at distance, but equally keep him in our sights. It was a tactical hour ahead and there were many people to thank for keeping their discipline and encouraging me to keep mine.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nThe greatest credit for this piece of art should go not to me, but to Juma Wanyama, my local guide for the last eight years in Amboseli. He found and incentivised the scouts that tracked Tim, but more importantly, he knows both this elephant and me equally well and he allowed me to put myself potentially in harm’s way. Had our relationship been nascent, there is no way this picture could have been captured, because at its heart there is a triangular trust between three mammals. I have had to earn that with Juma and Juma has certainly had to earn it with Tim. It is this simple dynamic that is the secret to the image - trust.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\nIt was this trust that offered me the chance of a ground up perspective and that was key to the composition, as was the 58mm lens - an optical dream of a lens - and the very same lens with which I shot Mankind with in 2014. It will always be my favourite lens now - how can it not?","brand":"David Yarrow","offers":[{"title":"94 x 137 cm (image size) | 132 x 175 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910391496791,"sku":"DY-PH-Africa 2-94 x 137 cm (image size) | 132 x 175 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":53000.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true},{"title":"142 x 206 cm (image size) | 180 x 244 cm (framed size)","offer_id":43910391529559,"sku":"DY-PH-Africa 2-142 x 206 cm (image size) | 180 x 244 cm (framed size)-AR-SI-N\/A","price":63600.0,"currency_code":"CHF","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/files\/yarrow_david_105_africa_02_132_20x_20170.jpg?v=1780073698"}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0274\/0553\/collections\/david-yarrow-876466_4c67dcd4-3c2b-4d6b-9896-ad573c0e7e1f.jpg?v=1769510175","url":"https:\/\/petragut.com\/de\/collections\/david-yarrow-copy.oembed?page=3","provider":"Petra Gut Contemporary AG","version":"1.0","type":"link"}