Bearish 3 - David Yarrow | Fine Art Photography | Wet Brown Bear – Available at Hilton Contemporary Gallery Chicago

Bearish III

Katmai, Alaska – 2021

“Bears are not an easy subject matter for me; in part because the backdrops are often a little messy, and in part the obvious safety issues. Fortunately, bears in Katmai, Alaska during the summer salmon runs are used to sharing rivers with fishermen and are largely comfortable with human presence.

The biggest issue for me, however, is that my default position is to try and glorify an animal and that tends to draw me towards the biggest versions of a species. With bears, that is being a little greedy, and in Katmai, one simply has to work with what is available.

Last week, however, this beautiful and sizeable sow caught our eye and one rainy morning she put on a little show for us out in the tundra. The light was marginal, but I just about got away with it. I was always looking for the head on shot and the rain added another layer of textural detail to what is a stunning bear.

This was the only photograph I took away from five long days in the field, but that’s fine with me. As with the fishermen up in Katmai; it is not the number of fish you catch, but the size of the biggest one.

I want to thank our excellent pilots Chad and Devon for looking after us so well in and out of Iliamna.

-David Yarrow

Available Sizes

Large - Edition of 12 + 3 AP
  • Image Size: 56” x 97" in (142 cm x 246 cm)
  • Framed Image: 71” x 112” in (180 cm x 284 cm)
Standard - Edition of 12 + 3 AP
  • Image Size: 37” x 64” in (94 cm x 163 cm)
  • Framed Image: 52” x 79” in (132 cm x 201 cm)

We ship worldwide and use a multitude of providers to safely deliver your artwork. Domestic delivery and installation may also be available via Hilton Contemporary’s private art shuttle. Please inquire.


    David Yarrow Polar Bear

    No Time to Kill

    Alaskan North Slope – 2025

    “Almost all my decent work with polar bears has been taken in flat or low light. When we travel to the extreme locations where bear encounters are likely, there
    is an acceptance that we must simply work with whatever weather we are given; it’s not as if we are there to do anything else. These locations tend to be light
    on optionality and patience and a few downloaded Paramount TV shows are a necessity. These assignments are not for people who get restless or need comfort.

    Poor light pushes camera capability to the edge and ultimately reduces the margin of error in critical moments. This moment was one of those, as the polar
    bear was coming right towards me and carried a proper menace.
    Polar bears “pop” in an image more than any other mammal I know because of their white coats. If those white coats are then highlighted by sunlight, it can all be a bit much and visually it often does not work.

    This photograph, which I took recently on the Alaskan North Slope, works, not only because of the murky weather, but also because the bear’s head position serves to highlight the bulk that comes behind it. This is a big boy and this was the very last frame I took before I had tomove. A ground up camera position is so important, but with that goes a need to always put safety first.

    I was up in the arctic for a few days and took fewer than two dozen photographs. That’s the way it is up there. Less is more.

    -David Yarrow

    Available Sizes

    Large - Edition of 12 + 3 AP
    • Image Size: 43” x 103" in (109 cm x 262 cm)
    • Framed Image: 58” x 118” in (147 cm x 300 cm)
    Standard - Edition of 12 + 3 AP
    • Image Size: 32” x 77” in (81 cm x 196 cm)
    • Framed Image: 47” x 92” in (119 cm x 134 cm)

    We ship worldwide and use a multitude of providers to safely deliver your artwork. Domestic delivery and installation may also be available via Hilton Contemporary’s private art shuttle. Please inquire.


      Gone Fishing (colour)

      Gone Fishing (Colour)

      Funnel Creek, Alaska – 2025

      Archival Pigment Print

      The volume of salmon in this river in Katmai, Alaska during late July/early August pushes the odds in favour of the bear. Their hit rate may be less than 20%, but that still means they should catch a salmon within a couple of minutes of a period of frenzied fishing. The old, experienced bears tend to have a higher success rate and go about the whole process with a nonchalance born out of historically high hit rates.

      The odds of success for the photographer are far lower than for the bear. There are so many more variables at play and most of them are outside of the cameraman’s control.

      Ideally the bear needs to be close and head on to the camera and that outcome tends to be as much about luck as rigorous predictive analysis. I also much prefer flat, calm light as opposed to strong and directional, whereas the bear doesn’t care one bit.

      This frame works. The bear is sharp and focused on the job in hand and my angle of view is right. There is clarity and yet some dynamism and the light is flat. It doesn’t often happen and when it does, it is always satisfying.

      -David Yarrow

      Available sizes

      Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

      • Image Size: 56″ x 58″ in (142 x 147 cm)
      • Framed Image: 71″ x 73″ in (180 x 185 cm)

      Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

      • Image Size: 37″ x 38″ in (94 x 97 cm)
      • Framed Image: 52″ x 53″ in (132 x 135 cm)

      We ship worldwide and use a multitude of providers to safely deliver your masterpiece. Domestic delivery and installation may also be available via Hilton Asmus Contemporary’s private art shuttle. Please inquire.


        Backcountry (Colour)

        Backcountry (Colour)

        Backcountry

        Archival Pigment Print

        “In my experience, Alaskan bear photography leans heavily on two variables: logistical rigour and luck. If there is a third component, it is probably patience and an ability to kill time. I don’t really think camerawork, above a basic level, has much to do with it; it is more about making sure the camera is in front of interesting stuff when it matters and that is a function of logistical prowess and luck.

        I sense that over the years our experience has helped push luck in our direction. As my friend Gary Player the golfer once commented “the more I practice the luckier I seem to get”. The guidance we have from 15 years of metadata of bear encounters on this river is never far from my mind. It is an iterative process and we have most certainly learnt on the job. In the early days, I really had no idea what I was doing and my work with bears was bland and generic.

        This part of Alaska is proper backcountry and a world removed from the staged shoots I do around the world. There are few comforts other than familiarity, but that is the biggest luxury of all. I think I have spent more time over the years on this small patch of river gravel than I have in any smart hotel room in the world.

        I don’t like to photograph bears when the light is bright. Somehow they become less menacing, and the sense of awe can be lost. It rains a great deal in Alaska, but there are also many sunny days during the salmon runs and on those days bear photography can become challenging not long after breakfast. It is a long way to come to work in suboptimal light, so we tend to push things logistically.

        The day I took this photograph we were in the air in our float plane just after 5.30am and no one was anywhere near us when we trekked the tundra 30 minutes later. That is the way to do it – be alone and in place early in the backcountry and then wait for decent daylight and the magic to unfold. I was back home and in a welcome hot shower by 10 am. I think I am too old now to believe that there is any better way to start the day.”

        -David Yarrow

        Available sizes

        Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

        • Image Size: 70″ x 56″ in (177.8 x 142.2 cm)
        • Framed Image: 85″ x 71″ in (215.9 x 180.3 cm)

        Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

        • Image Size: 46″ x 37″ in (116.8 x 94 cm)
        • Framed Image: 61″ x 52 in (154.9 x 132.1 cm)

        We ship worldwide and use a multitude of providers to safely deliver your masterpiece. Domestic delivery and installation may also be available via Hilton Asmus Contemporary’s private art shuttle. Please inquire.


          Backcountry (B&W)

          Backcountry

          Backcountry

          Archival Pigment Print

          “In my experience, Alaskan bear photography leans heavily on two variables: logistical rigour and luck. If there is a third component, it is probably patience and an ability to kill time. I don’t really think camerawork, above a basic level, has much to do with it; it is more about making sure the camera is in front of interesting stuff when it matters and that is a function of logistical prowess and luck.

          I sense that over the years our experience has helped push luck in our direction. As my friend Gary Player the golfer once commented “the more I practice the luckier I seem to get”. The guidance we have from 15 years of metadata of bear encounters on this river is never far from my mind. It is an iterative process and we have most certainly learnt on the job. In the early days, I really had no idea what I was doing and my work with bears was bland and generic.

          This part of Alaska is proper backcountry and a world removed from the staged shoots I do around the world. There are few comforts other than familiarity, but that is the biggest luxury of all. I think I have spent more time over the years on this small patch of river gravel than I have in any smart hotel room in the world.

          I don’t like to photograph bears when the light is bright. Somehow they become less menacing, and the sense of awe can be lost. It rains a great deal in Alaska, but there are also many sunny days during the salmon runs and on those days bear photography can become challenging not long after breakfast. It is a long way to come to work in suboptimal light, so we tend to push things logistically.

          The day I took this photograph we were in the air in our float plane just after 5.30am and no one was anywhere near us when we trekked the tundra 30 minutes later. That is the way to do it – be alone and in place early in the backcountry and then wait for decent daylight and the magic to unfold. I was back home and in a welcome hot shower by 10 am. I think I am too old now to believe that there is any better way to start the day.”

          -David Yarrow

          Available sizes

          Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

          • Image Size: 70″ x 56″ in (177.8 x 142.2 cm)
          • Framed Image: 85″ x 71″ in (215.9 x 180.3 cm)

          Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

          • Image Size: 46″ x 37″ in (116.8 x 94 cm)
          • Framed Image: 61″ x 52 in (154.9 x 132.1 cm)

          We ship worldwide and use a multitude of providers to safely deliver your masterpiece. Domestic delivery and installation may also be available via Hilton Asmus Contemporary’s private art shuttle. Please inquire.


            Wet, Wet, Wet

            Wet Wet Wet

            Alaska – 2023

            I have largely moved my focus away from wildlife over the last few years, but I am in awe of some of the work I continue to see from other photographers in this challenging and crowded space.

            One assignment in the wild, that still excites me enough to take it on every year, is the sockeye salmon run in the rivers to the south of Iliamna, Alaska. It may be an annual summer event, but unlike Wimbledon, the dates are never locked down and so much depends on random variables such as the snow falls in the preceding winter, spring temperatures and the consequential river levels. This year the salmon started to run about 12-14 days after the median date from the last 20 years; we had to adapt.

            We had some tough days in Alaska in the summer of 2023, but we also had our moments. This tight portrait, on a miserable rainy evening in very low light, offers a generous level of textural detail. I like working when there is no sun, especially in places like Alaska, as the narrower tonal range removes noise and elevates the subject. I know it sounds counter intuitive to wish for bad conditions, but in the field, I prefer to get wet more than I prefer to get sunburnt.

            This picture has a symmetry to it and the bear’s eyes are engaged. It was a lucky glimpse of a moment and a passing testament to the camera’s capability. The operating performance of cameras has improved so much during my career and no more so than when working in low light conditions. My shutter speed was necessarily low and I was lying flat on a moving river boat, so all I can claim credit for is avoiding camera shake. To be fair, most of what I took that night was rubbish, but you only need one.

            AVAILABLE SIZES:

            LARGE: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
            • Image Size: 65" x 56” in (165.1 cm x 142.2 cm)
            • Framed Image: 80" x 71” in (203.2 cm x 180.3 cm)
            STANDARD: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
            • Image Size: 43” x 37” in (109.2 cm x 93.98 cm)
            • Framed Image: 58” x 52” (147.3 cm x 132.1 cm)

            We ship worldwide and use a multitude of providers to safely deliver your masterpiece. Domestic delivery and installation may also be available via Hilton Asmus Contemporary’s private art shuttle. Please inquire.


              Bear Island

              Bear Island

              Alaska – 2023

              On the final day of our annual trip, we finally had our moment in Alaska.

              Filming bears in this final frontier is a challenge that we take up almost every year in late July. We do this knowing that so many variables will come into play and that the key is always to adapt to what we find and not be prescriptive. No location demands a more fluid schedule than Alaska.

              The timing of the sockeye salmon run, the depth of the rivers and the behavioural pattern of the big bears are always leading factors when we iterate our plans and then iterate again.

              But during our week in Katmai, we had a new factor – blue skies and hot bright sunshine – not the weather associated with this part of the world. We recognised that this would limit our filming hours to the early morning but being able to land our float plane at dawn, high in Katmai was not a given. In these weather conditions mist often forms on the lake where we land, thus making access to the river and the salmon run impossible.

              On the first two days of our week we were too early as the bears were late. Then on the first big day, the mist was thick and we were not able to land. The next day we got in and learned from watching the bear activity but didn’t capture anything of note. On the final day, we were all set and had again refined our plan, but all our pilot’s vast experience was called upon to land the plane through the mist at 6 am.

              The activity on the river, as the soft early morning light broke through the mist, was as spectacular as anything I have been lucky enough to witness in recent years. There was no point counting the bears as we would lose that count.

              Our slightly contentious view, after 10 years coming up here, is that the best lens with which to film bears is a standard lens. The camera kind of sees what we see and this means that the magnification of telephotos is not available. The vast majority of good bear images have been taken with telephoto lenses and we recognise the merits of shooting from a distance but I prefer my camera to be close.

              Standard lenses tell a wider story and that is always our goal. This requires the use of remote controls and a great a deal of predicative thinking. It is not exactly a “Hail Mary” approach, but it is low percentage; their default result is to fail.

              That’s why this moment, at around 6.45 am that morning, was so welcome. We could then go home and have a bath.

              AVAILABLE SIZES:

              LARGE: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
              • Image Size: 50" x 103” in (127 cm x 261.6 cm)
              • Framed Image: 65" x 118” in (165.1 cm x 299.7 cm)
              STANDARD: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
              • Image Size: 37” x 77” in (93.98 cm x 195.6 cm)
              • Framed Image: 52” x 92” (132.1 cm x 233.7 cm)

              We ship worldwide and use a multitude of providers to safely deliver your masterpiece. Domestic delivery and installation may also be available via Hilton Asmus Contemporary’s private art shuttle. Please inquire.


                Bear Market

                Bear Market

                Alaska – 2023

                The early bird catches the worm and I remember thinking, when I took this photograph sometime before 6 am in remote Alaska, that we had been rewarded for our efforts to make our way to this creek long before most sane people are out of bed.

                Warm windless summer days are not normal in Alaska and offer threats as well as opportunities. The principal threat is strong sunshine, but also on these days, in the mountains of Katmai, thick mist can form at pre- dawn over the landing lakes and on the previous day, visibility was not good enough for our float plane to land. That can be so frustrating, as by the time the mist has cleared, the sun is high and filming is a bit miserable. The day is a right off.

                But we were luckier on this morning and much of the credit for this photograph goes to our bush pilot; he saw a brief clearing over the water and he went for it. We then gathered our gear and walked briskly down to the river where we knew the bears were fishing in numbers.

                Five minutes after I took the photograph, the light that makes the image had changed materially, and the sense of mood was gone. That period, just before the sun peaks over the mountains, lasts a few minutes and that is all we had. There is enough light to film, but no harshness from direct sunlight. It is the briefest of windows. I knew I had something in the can when we flew back to the lodge around 8 am, the bears were cooperative and really didn’t mind me following them up the river. I needed to be close otherwise the foreground would be loose and I am always wary of that.

                As it is, this picture is special to me as there is such a palpable sense of place. It shouts “Alaska” and does so with content that is unusual. The premise of taking pictures of the backs of animals would seem unpromising, but in this case, it tells the story I wanted to tell. It is “Bear Market”.

                AVAILABLE SIZES:

                LARGE: Edition of 12
                • Image Size: 37" x 100” in (93.98 cm x 254 cm)
                • Framed Image: 52" x 118” in (132.1 cm x 299.7 cm)
                STANDARD: Edition of 12
                • Image Size: 27” x 73” in (68.58 cm x 185.4 cm)
                • Framed Image: 42” x 88” (106.7 cm x 223.5 cm)

                We ship worldwide and use a multitude of providers to safely deliver your masterpiece. Domestic delivery and installation may also be available via Hilton Asmus Contemporary’s private art shuttle. Please inquire.


                  Brutus

                  Brutus

                  Brutus

                  Alaska, USA – 2021

                  This is a huge coastal bear; a living version of the stuffed ones that adorn the airports of lodges and airports in Alaska. They are bigger on the coast than in the inland tundra and that draws me to areas such as Kamishak Bay and the river that runs into it.

                  Adult bears draw our breath the most when they are standing as that is when their shoulders, their bulk and their menace are amplified. The average adult male coastal bear weighs five times as much as an average adult man and in many bear pictures – including the majority of mine – this is not adequately conveyed. Sometimes a wet bear can look a bit like an oversized dog and leave the cameraman frustrated that the encounter has been disserved.

                  But not here. A true first for me and an encounter I will long remember. There was a huge amount of luck involved and then at the key moment, just a little steel. I am low in the water and the bear is towering above me – there is no room for camera shake.

                  It was a fairly miserable day weather wise, but actually I think that the rainfall helps the image. Sometimes I work in a studio, but this was about as far from a studio as it is possible to be.

                  AVAILABLE SIZES:

                  LARGE - Edition of 12 + 3 AP:
                  • Image Size: 64” x 56" in (162.56 cm x 142.24 cm)
                  • Framed Image: 79” x 71” in (200.66 cm x 180.34 cm)
                  STANDARD - Edition of 12 + 3 AP:
                  • Image Size: 43” x 37" in (109.22 cm x 93.98 cm)
                  • Framed Image: 58" x 52" (147.32 cm x 132.08 cm)

                  We ship worldwide and use a multitude of providers to safely deliver your masterpiece. Domestic delivery and installation may also be available via Hilton Asmus Contemporary’s private art shuttle. Please inquire.


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