The Girl with the Cigar (Colour)

The Girl with the Cigar (Colour)
Durango, Colorado – 2026
“There are no more useful additives to a mountain story than fresh snow on the ground coupled with a decent but not overwhelming amount of falling snow. Neither comes on demand like room service and our unlucky moments make the lucky ones so much better. Gratitude for the good days is probably a subconscious product of all the underwhelming weather conditions we will face over the next year.
This was the first snowfall on the celebrated Durango & Silverton Railroad in Colorado for over three weeks. When we booked the steam train, the cowboy and the fashion model Kelsey Merritt, we had no idea what weather conditions would prevail that January morning and the results can be consigned to a case study on the random walk of luck.
Kelsey shines in her role; there had to be a palpable sense of sovereignty and a hint of nonchalance. She had never puffed on a cigar before, but she did so as if she grew up with a bunch of wise guys in the south side of Chicago.
I am drawn toward cinematic imagery and this is a story made for the silver screen. My preconception was that a wide composition would allow for a broader story to be told. It really is as simple as that. The focal plane does not exclude the train or the cowboy; it just celebrates Kelsey.
Women have been underrepresented in Westerns to the point of parody and the series we have just embarked on addresses that imbalance. There were girls on the final frontier and many of them had a casual relationship with the law. That all adds to the rich tapestry of the Wild West. There is something most alluring about women who do not play by the rules.”
-David Yarrow
AVAILABLE SIZES:
Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 37" x 69" (94 x 175.3 cm)
- Framed Image: 52" x 84" (132.1 x 213.4 cm)
Large: Edition of 12 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 55" x 103" (139.7 x 261.6 cm)
- Framed Image: 70" x 118" (177.8 x 299.7 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.
Saturday Night Live (Colour)

Jackson Hole, Wyoming – 2025
“It’s only when an adult bison head finds itself next to an adult human head that the enormity of the animal can be truly conveyed. This is not an easy trick in an open ranchland, never mind at a saloon entrance in the mountains of Wyoming. The bison is such an emblematic part of the American West and whenever we film them, either in the wild or on a set, I am drawn to the very big bulls. Why go any other way?
We know that in telling stories from the wild west we are on well-trodden ground – it is the oldest genre of them all – and that does mean we have a deep fear of the mundane. I feel the need to push some boundaries in my own revisionism whilst not being too serious about the whole crusade. We are looking to be playful long before we are looking to preach. There is a cartoonish element to the whole process and my characters tend to be stripped back to basic levels, as is the case here, with the cowboy and the saloon girl. Thank you always to Josie Canseco who looks the part, even in the extreme cold.
In most situations it is the creative idea that needs to be worked on rather than specifically the execution, but in this case, the execution was a formidable undertaking; the bison is not an animal that lends itself to placement or set direction.
Fortunately, we do know one bison that goes by the name of Clyde who has a wrangler and can – to an extent – be persuaded to perform to order.”
-David Yarrow
AVAILABLE SIZES:
Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 37" x 44" in (93.98 cm × 111.76 cm)
- Framed Image: 52" x 59" in (132.08 cm × 149.86 cm)
Large: Edition of 12 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 56" x 66" in (142.24 cm × 167.64 cm)
- Framed Image: 71" x 81" in (180.34 cm × 205.74 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.
You Cannot Be Serious (Colour)

Jackson Hole, Wyoming – 2025
“John McEnroe is a sporting gunslinger, an urban cowboy and an utterly unique individual. He has never been one to accept convention or authority and was perfectly qualified therefore to play a lead role when we told a few stories one winter evening outside the legendary Millon Dollar Cowboy Bar in Jackson, Wyoming. He is everything I remember from him on court – competitive, questioning and sometimes irascible, but always alert and on point. We enjoy working with him as it prompts us to be at our creative best. I like to be on my toes.
John is a true American icon with some extraordinary gifts in the hand, eye, ball department. But he can also hold a good line in reasoned debate – which is why he has become a voice of authority on many issues over and above tennis. His dad was, of course, a lawyer, as indeed is his brother Mark who joined us on this trip. My sense is that over the years the McEnroes have won most of the arguments they have entered.
My creative predilection is to be wry rather than earnest and when we involve someone who has led as full a life as John, we would never want to ever suggest that we have earned the right to do anything other than have fun. We will work quick and smart and will not abuse his time – he has certainly earned that right. We will leave the loftier ambitions to artists elsewhere.
I think John loves music as much as sport and of course the Million Dollar Cowboy Bar is first and foremost a music venue. I am sure that were his dear friend – the late, great Jimmy Buffett – to see this image, he would raise his glass and develop a wry smile.”
-David Yarrow
AVAILABLE SIZES:
Standard: Edition of 20 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 39" x 37" in (99.06 cm × 93.98 cm)
- Framed Image: 54" x 52" in (137.16 cm × 132.08 cm)
Large: Edition of 20 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 59" x 56" in (149.86 cm × 142.24 cm)
- Framed Image: 74" x 71" in (187.96 cm × 180.34 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.
Twilight (Colour)

Jackson Hole, Wyoming – 2025
“Telling stories of the Wild West in one single image is a challenging brief, as no matter the number of layers a photographer tries to incorporate in one frame, there can be a sense that he or she always wants to say more. After all, the “Push West” is the greatest story ever told.
That is why snow is such a helpful variant as it adds an extra character for free and we welcome that. I want to be visually greedy without overplaying it and bad weather or snow is often the solution. We like to work in bad weather or the remnants of it.
The language of light is the cornerstone of photography and I am drawn to the risk/reward ratio of working in sub optimal ambient light. This is particularly true when there is a Western brief, as this was a metaphorically dark and sinister era. The loosely governed nights were long and presumably full of menace.
In the same way that we would tell stories of Palm Beach society life in the richness of full daytime sunshine, tales of the lawless “final frontier” beg for a more Hitchcockian mood. I had this lighting in mind in the few days before I took this photograph in the mountains of Wyoming.
The concept was to build a saloon that looked marooned in the middle of nowhere and in so doing play to the vastness and emptiness of the Wild West. I sensed that half an hour before dusk would allow the lanterns in the old saloon to glow a little whilst also having enough daylight to tell an outdoor narrative. 30 minutes either side of then and it would be suboptimal.
Hollywood has long cast Westerns with a deeply masculine skew – almost to the point of parody. Therein lies an opportunity, because women must have been an integral part of the push West and I like to celebrate powerful women in my stories. The Austrian actress in this photograph, Heidi Berger, owns this stage – she has beauty, femininity and grace in her role but be in no doubt that she will pull the trigger if forced.
This picture is a homage to all those women out there who take no shit.”
-David Yarrow
AVAILABLE SIZES:
Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 31" x 77" in (78.74 cm × 195.58 cm)
- Framed Image: 46" x 92" in (116.84 cm × 233.68 cm)
Large: Edition of 12 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 41" x 103" in (104.14 cm × 261.62 cm)
- Framed Image: 56" x 118" in (142.24 cm × 299.72 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.
The Jackson 4 (Colour)

JACKSON HOLE, WYOMING – 2025
“The Million Dollar Cowboy Bar in Jackson, Wyoming opened its doors in 1937 and has become one of the most recognisable and celebrated cowboy bars in America. It offers a backdrop to hundreds of “selfies” every day and its longevity as an institution has allowed it to be permanently woven into the fabric of Americana. Very few country music stars have circumvented the Cowboy Bar.
I see it primarily as a place of the night, not the day; the fabled neon lights mark the epicentre of a community that retains an understated cowboy charm despite the huge wealth that sits in the Teton amphitheater. I have only ever photographed the facade of this bar in the middle of the night – it just seems the right option.
On this occasion, my creative leaning was to tell a 1970s music story with the nighttime facade of the bar as my backdrop. After all, little has changed here since the 1970s and this is a music venue first and foremost.
The VW bus was an obvious starting prop, but perhaps less likely was my choice of band leader – the American sporting icon – John McEnroe. John is a passionate guitarist, so I knew this role would appeal to his forever engaged mind. He was also something of a cowboy when it came to showing deference to authority in the tennis world. John brought the Wild West to Wimbledon and Flushing Meadows, so it was a natural fit at several levels.
I believe that my Jackson 4 caught the right vibe that night and the falling snow adds to the sense of place. I would imagine that back in the day many cowboys would have paid good money to swap with John and be on the road with these girls. But he has currency – he is, after all, John McEnroe.”
-David Yarrow
AVAILABLE SIZES:
Standard: Edition of 20 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 37" x 38" in (93.98 cm × 96.52 cm)
- Framed Image: 52" x 53" in (132.08 cm × 134.62)
Large: Edition of 20 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 56" x 57" in (142.24 cm × 144.78 cm)
- Framed Image: 71" x 72" in (180.34 cm × 182.88 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.
Being John McEnroe (Colour)

JACKSON HOLE, WYOMING – 2025
“The Silver Dollar Saloon at the Wort Hotel in Jackson Hole is a celebrated institution. There are quite a few bars scattered across the US sharing the same name, but I doubt many share the vice like grip that this venue holds over the local community.
I sat with the GM over Thanksgiving lunch in 2025 and he told me that they would hope to do 650 covers that day. That is a material operation, not the numbers of a poorly operated dive bar. There are no central archetypes at the Silver Dollar – it seems to play host to anyone living in the zip code and that makes for a rich visual feast. There are, however, more cowboy hats here than in a Parisian cafe.
The lead feature of the saloon is a neon illuminated winding bar which incorporates over 2,000 silver dollar coins into its resin surface – it’s part disco, part Lonesome Dove and it should not work aesthetically and yet it emphatically does. It was clearly the central prop around which to build this carefully staged vignette.
My central character for this set was the unique national treasure that is John McEnroe – musician, tennis legend, commentator, artist and general badass. John cannot really be pigeonholed into a convenient silo but give him a Gibson guitar and a cowboy hat and he looks much more at home here in the heart of the American West than he ever did at Wimbledon.
We had fun with the set dressing; I wanted a few nods to his presence in the bar which all added to the parody. I think an evening unfolding like this is entirely plausible at the Silver Dollar.”
-David Yarrow
AVAILABLE SIZES:
Standard: Edition of 20 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 37" x 65" in (94.0 × 165.1 cm)
- Framed Image: 52" x 80" in (132.1 × 203.2 cm)
Large: Edition of 20 + 3 APs
- Image Size: 56" x 99" in (142.2 × 251.5 cm)
- Framed Image: 71" x 114" in (180.3 × 289.6 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.
A Winter Journey (Colour)

Sylte, Norway – 2025
“There is a rich assortment of detail in this frame and I sense that all of it helps to elevate the image. Of course, at its core, it is a photograph of a beautiful and famous 1948 Porsche 356, but I don’t see this as a car image; there are enough layers to tell a wider story.
The engine smoke coming from the 1920 ferry’s chimney gives a sense of travel, the aged ferry itself gives a sense of timelessness and meanwhile the fresh snow on the car deck, on the ship’s bell and on the life buoys, gives a sense of the cold. The glow from lights in the captain’s control room and up front gives a further nod to the low ambient winter light and the captain himself adds legitimacy to the journey. The imposing mountains behind the ferry inform us that we are in a location where travel cannot be routine. It is Viking country and home to legends, myths and folklore.
Nadine Leopold’s character is the reason for this ferry journey; we all know that. But where she is going and why is up to the viewer to imagine. Is she leaving someone behind or is she about to reunite? It could be either, but she will probably not be alone for long.
I would like to thank the octogenarian owners of the 1920 ferry – The Bilfergen – Scandinavia’s oldest working ferry. We have worked with many props over the years, but this beauty, so lovingly maintained by the owners, will take a great deal of beating.“
-David Yarrow
AVAILABLE SIZES:
Standard: Edition of 12, 3 AP, 1 EP
- Image Size: 37” x 41” in (94 cm × 104 cm)
- Framed Image: 52" x 56" in (132 cm × 142 cm)
Large: Edition of 12, 3 AP, 1 EP
- Image Size: 56” x 63” in (142 cm × 160 cm)
- Framed Image: 71" x 78" in (180 cm × 198 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.
Don't Pay the Ferryman (Colour)

Eresfjord, Norway – 2025
“This would be a decent location for a shoot in the middle of summer, but in the winter, after a foot of fresh snow, it becomes a blowout location. Finding and
locking down permits for remote spots like this is an integral part of our work; in a single frame, there is no mileage for a lame backdrop. It matters not one bit that there isn’t a hotel within 50 miles – that, in fact, is a positive.
The 1948 Porsche 356 works perfectly as a prop too; its curves and the female model’s curves have a harmony that then visually elevates the harsh right angles of the austere ferry ramp. There is a calm serenity to the photograph, despite the props being an unlikely fusion of Stuttgart, Paris and Pittsburg.
These are the days in winter we long for – days when a storm ends and there is fresh snow on the ground and flat light. Our props and cast are in place and we can
just leverage the opportunity. It probably only happens to us once or possibly twice
a season, simply because the lead time for production is too long to plan around the weather and therefore when it does happen, it is largely just luck.
All we can do, when we are presented with an opportunity like this, is to try and make the most of it. There are many mundane days in the field when the weather does not cooperate and these perfect days are the payback days.
Chris de Burgh’s cult song from 1982, Don’t Pay the Ferryman, seemed a wry title for this photograph.“
-David Yarrow
AVAILABLE SIZES:
Standard: Edition of 12, 3 AP, 1 EP
- Image Size: 37” x 44” in (94 cm × 112 cm)
- Framed Image: 52" x 59" in (132 cm × 150 cm)
Large: Edition of 12, 3 AP, 1 EP
- Image Size: 56” x 66” in (142 cm × 168 cm)
- Framed Image: 71" x 81" in (180 cm × 206 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.
The Girl on the Ferry (Colour)

Sylte, Norway – 2025
“The concept of this photograph was some time in the planning and its execution certainly marks a step forward in our ambition levels. I believe there is merit in committing to a story and not being spooked by the cost of production if something special is coming together. We have made mistakes in the past by looking at costs without looking at opportunity. The biggest mistake I can make is to curb ambition and not attack. We do not enjoy offering more of the same and there is a palpable commitment to try and surprise.
The Porsche 356 convertible on the ferry was manufactured in 1948 and the ferry is the oldest still operating in Norway – coming into service all of 125 years ago. I immediately recognised the visual potential of this improbable union when they met each other at the ferry quay in the remote village of Sylte in the Norwegian mountains south of Molde. The ferry crew, with an average age of 80, deserved to be fully rewarded for sailing the Bilfergen through the fjords in a snowstorm to meet me. Their journey lasted 12 hours.
The fjords in this area have grandeur and beauty and no more so than after the denouement of a meaningful winter storm. Norwegians are good in bad weather and we needed all their celebrated experience of working on icy roads to get the Porsche and its transit lorry through the mountains to the meet point in time. There is only about four hours of decent light at this time of year and time was critical.
We had a strong set of cards to play with that cold morning, but I needed to prioritise the conveyance of a sense of place without losing the currency of having such powerful props. The solution to the puzzle, which we had anticipated, was to film in the middle of the fjord from the deck of another boat of similar
height. If I could get very close to the ferry and use a wide-angle lens, I could get the compositional balance that I was striving for.
The most credit for this photograph should go to The Girl on the Ferry – Nadine Leopold – who did an excellent job of looking warm and graceful on a cold winter’s morning. That was a big ask.“
-David Yarrow
AVAILABLE SIZES:
Standard: Edition of 12, 3 AP, 1 EP
- Image Size: 26” x 77” in (66 cm × 196 cm)
- Framed Image: 41" x 92" in (104 cm × 234 cm)
Large: Edition of 12, 3 AP, 1 EP
- Image Size: 34” x 103” in (86 cm × 262 cm)
- Framed Image: 49" x 118" in (124 cm × 300 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.
The Lady of the Lake (Colour)

Eresfjord, Norway – 2025
“The grey frame of this 1948 Porsche 356 complements the snowy and misty backdrop of this winter’s day. There is a calm tonal balance to the photograph which would not have been possible if the sun had been out. There may not be 50 shades of grey, but there is a good dozen.
This is a coveted and highly valuable car and its shape is lauded by car enthusiasts. I knew that I had to capture it in profile on at least one shoot in Norway. This was the location in which to do so.
When we were planning this shoot, we had no idea that the west coast of Norway would be hit by a material early winter snowstorm. We considered this to be a fortunate break so long as we could get the car to the location, which was in an isolated fjord northeast of Molde.
Snow normally allows the photographer a little more light to play with and importantly it adds another layer to the story with no extra charge. We are big fans of working in the snow, especially in soft or low light. But it does also offer
logistical challenges in terms of access and consequently, in Norway, we work with seasoned professionals.
The Austrian model Nadine Leopold does an excellent job as the lady of the lake. There is a sovereignty to her pose and I think the cigarette adds a bad ass nonchalance to her character. She seems very much in control of the situation – whatever that situation might indeed be.
The Lady of The Lake was an influential narrative poem written by Sir Walter Scott in the early part of the 19th Century. Scott was from central Scotland ( just like myself) and hence I thought it as good a name for this photograph as any.“
-David Yarrow
AVAILABLE SIZES:
Standard: Edition of 12, 3 AP, 1 EP
- Image Size: 35” x 69” in (89 cm × 175 cm)
- Framed Image: 50" x 84" in (127 cm × 213 cm)
Large: Edition of 12, 3 AP, 1 EP
- Image Size: 52” x 103” in (132 cm × 262 cm)
- Framed Image: 67" x 118" in (170 cm × 300 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.










