Drovers

This photograph was taken in 2021, but I sense it could have been taken in 1870. We are drawn to filming locations exuding a palpable sense of timelessness thus offering optionality on the narrative.

The more remote the location, the greater the possibility for us to remove the “now” and let our imagination jump into any era over the last six or seven generations. West Texas is my West World and that is why this bleak, mournful and unforgiving canvas has such a grip on me. It is part of America that time most certainly forgot. No wonder film makers have long been lured here.
Cowboys and cattle are not a new story; the partnership is one of the most enduring symbols of post-Civil War America and that is why they visually complement this landscape so effortlessly.

We knew what we wanted to do here, but working against the light with this amount of dust is a low percentage game. Dust can be a cameraman’s friend as it defies gravity, but there is a tipping point when it becomes his foe. On this frame, the lead drover is just out of the dust storm allowing for detail and the full benefit of the back light. The rest of this particular series was of no use at all. That is what we mean by a low percentage game.

I am in awe of the cowboys with whom we work in West Texas. They are the real deal and nothing is too much trouble for them. They have manners, work ethic and a sense of duty.

Texas is often mocked, but I think we can learn a great deal from cowboy culture.

AVAILABLE SIZES:

Standard

  • Image size: 30" x 67"
  • Framed with a 3" mat: 41" x 78"
  • Framed with a 5" mat: 45" x 82"

Large

  • Image size: 44" x 101"
  • Framed with a 3" mat: 55" x 112"
  • Framed with a 5" mat: 59" x 116"

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.


    Grumpy Monkey

    Jigokudani National Park, Japan 2013

    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?

    AVAILABLE SIZES:

    LARGE - Edition of 20

    • Image: 43" x 68"
    • Framed: 58" x 83"

    STANDARD - Edition of 20

    • Image: 33" x 50"
    • Framed: 52" x 70"

    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.


      Shackleton

      The bigger this image is printed, the more powerful it is. On a phone, it looks like an average photograph and in a magazine, it will be a little better. But as a big print it has a real sense of place – it smacks of quintessential rural Japan in the winter. The light snow fall enhances the image as much as the snow on the young monkey’s face. Meanwhile the abstract contours of the waterfall behind add to a surreal winter wonderland scene. In my preconception, I needed snow fall and on the day, it went our way.

      There is a slight paradox in the ecosystem in which the snow monkeys congregate in that it looks other worldly, extreme and distant and yet it is actually so accessible. Grab a bullet train from Tokyo and door to door it is only a three-hour journey – including the climb from the entrance to the park. That means that there is no shortage of visitors on a daily basis and, as each hour passes the serenity is increasingly lost. On a weekend, as many as 500 visitors will make the trip – not ideal for my kind of photography.

      The solution is to stay locally and hope that overnight snow will deter or delay other photographers or tourists. The early bird catches the worm for sure. On this occasion we were most certainly the first up the mountain and there had been six inches of snow overnight. That was perfect. There had been about a foot of snow and the route up the hill was closed due to avalanche danger.

      Working in a snowfall is a fine trick – it adds that necessary narrative, but a blizzard is too much to see through if the subject to camera distance is more than a couple of feet. With the storm finally petered out, the snowfall around 9.30 am became more gentle and this allowed me to work from about 10 feet away and give as much context as possible. The snow monkey looks determined and in control – despite being dwarfed by his surroundings – it seemed apposite to call him Shackleton. His positioning at that moment in time was perfect.

      AVAILABLE SIZES:

      LARGE - Edition of 12

      • Image: 56" x 79"
      • Framed: 71" x 94"

      STANDARD - Edition of 12

      • Image: 37" x 64"
      • Framed: 52" x 79"

      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.


        Go Ahead Punk, Make My Day

        Simien Mountains, Northern Ethiopia 2018

        Every year as CGI capability improves, a richer and richer diet of fantasy monsters and creatures appear in movies and TV series. We drift into new worlds and escape from our own. And yet, and here is the irony, on our planet today there are animals that are almost beyond the stuff of fantasy but they are very real.

        I am not sure what this large gelada baboon was thinking, but I am going to guess that he found my presence, 12,000 feet up, a little irritating. This was his patch of land and who the hell was I to be trespassing? I have travelled the world in search of fresh detail and fresh content and this March, in the Simien Mountains, was a truly special experience. Not for him I am sure, but certainly for me. We will never meet again.

        AVAILABLE SIZES:

        LARGE - Edition of 12

        • Image: 56" x 60"
        • Framed: 71" x 75"

        STANDARD - Edition of 12

        • Image: 37" x 40"
        • Framed: 52" x 55"

        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.


          Members Only

          Simien Mountains, Northern Ethiopia 2018

          On most assignments, I tend to travel with a full range of Nikon prime lenses – albeit tilted to their wide angles. But in March, when I travelled to the spectacular Simien Mountain range in Northern Ethiopia, I travelled light as intuitively I knew that I only needed to take my “go to” 28mm wide angle lens.

          The reason for this was two fold – firstly I knew that the views are so majestic and biblical from the 12,000 feet peak of the escarpments, that any image that didn’t convey this narrative would fail. Secondly, my research has repeatedly told me that with the right local guide, the gelada baboon would not only be found with ease two hours after dawn and two hours before dusk around the escarpment edge, but also that proximity would not be an issue. This made the 28mm lens an easy choice.

          The air is thin at 12,000 feet and I was glad of a light camera bag. But I still found myself easily out of breath and grumpy because the mornings were simply not working. The view down from the escarpment takes the full brunt of the morning sun and the gelada’s eyes narrow and squint when facing the sun. I never like working “with the light anyway”, but it was clear that the big opportunity for the preconceived shot would be from 5 pm onwards. The gelada is the most decorative ape in the world – its beauty can’t be compromised by harsh light.

          On the Sunday afternoon, there was a torrential rain storm and I had all but given up for the day. But around 4 pm, the rain and thunder stopped and the escarpments were slowly brought to life with shafts of low late light. And so it was that we left the comfort of our dry camp and in one precious moment, I had the perfect encounter with a male gelada in exactly the kind of spot I would have dreamt of. Better still, the rain had transformed his hair from its traditional style into an electrified one. A bit like my shot, Grumpy Monkey, from a few years back, freak weather has given the image the edge.

          I do my job for moments like this. This photograph – as well as any I have taken in the last few years – hammers home the diversity of our planet. The human was trespassing in the ape’s mountain kingdom. His eyes say everything – the conviction of proprietorial residence for sure, but also dignity and resolve. Meanwhile to me, they will alway remind me to never go anywhere without a 28mm wide angle lens.

          AVAILABLE SIZES:

          LARGE - Edition of 12

          • Image: 56" x 60"
          • Framed: 71" x 75"

          STANDARD - Edition of 12

          • Image: 37" x 40"
          • Framed: 52" x 55"

          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.


            Swan Lake

            AVAILABLE SIZES:

            LARGE: Edition of 12

            • Image: 56" x 69"
            • Framed: 71" x 84"

            STANDARD: Edition of 12

            • Image: 37" x 46"
            • ​Framed: 52" x 61"

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              Hokkaido

              Hokkaido, Japan – 2017

              “Hokkaido, Japan’s northernmost island, has always offered photographers a timeless canvas on which to show creative courage. Some collectable contemporary photographers, such as Michael Kenna, have arguably produced their most coveted work in this region, playing with light, line, and form in a deliberately reductive approach. Michael’s images have always boasted simplicity rather than shying away from it, and his season of choice in Japan has always been winter.

              Snow is a photographer’s friend because it simplifies, and this seems particularly apt in Japan, where the
zen of calm is cherished. In rural areas, there is a conspicuous and multilayered removal of noise. Hokkaido is the antidote to the urban madness of Tokyo, and this will never change. If National Geographic produced a series on regions of the world where a region was an allegory to its culture, I bet it would have a section on the serenity of this island at the edge of the world.

              Like many others who find themselves in a creative industry, I go to Japan regularly for my fix. There is a visual dissonance that prompts and guides, and I embrace that to the full. When the unfamiliar is packaged with excellence, it instructs and stimulates, and this country offers that cocktail with greater intensity than anywhere else in the world.

              I’ve been an ambassador for the Japanese company Nikon in the United Kingdom and Europe for several years now, and I have worked consistently with the brand at both a testing level and also at key industry events such as Photokina in Cologne, Germany. It has served to reinforce my great respect for a national culture that has a default position of pride and perfection in all that it does.”

              -David Yarrow

              AVAILABLE SIZES:

              LARGE: Edition of 12

              • Image: 56" x 93"
              • Framed: 71" x 108"

              STANDARD: Edition of 12

              • Image: 37" x 61"
              • ​Framed: 52" x 76"

              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.


                WTF

                AVAILABLE SIZES:

                LARGE: Edition of 12

                • Image: 40" x 40"
                • Framed: 55" x 55"

                STANDARD: Edition of 12

                • Image: 30" x 30"
                • ​Framed: 45" x 45"

                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.


                  Taking Flight

                  AVAILABLE SIZES:

                  LARGE: Edition of 12

                  • Image: 56" x 96"
                  • Framed: 71" x 111"

                  STANDARD: Edition of 12

                  • Image: 37" x 63"
                  • ​Framed: 52" x 78"

                  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.


                    Take Off

                    AVAILABLE SIZES:

                    LARGE: Edition of 12

                    • Image: 56" x 63"
                    • Framed: 78" x 71"

                    STANDARD: Edition of 12

                    • Image: 37" x 42"
                    • ​Framed: 57" x 52"

                    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.


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