Trainspotting

Trainspotting

Durango, Colorado – 2025

Archival Pigment Print

“In 1860, a group of prospectors ventured into the San Juan Mountains seeking riches. They discovered gold and silver deposits along the Animas River, naming the area “Baker’s Park”. Despite news of the discovery spreading, the Civil War, and the fact that the land belonged to the Ute Indians, delayed miners from returning until the early 1870s.

But in 1874, Silverton’s town site was established, quickly becoming the hub of numerous mining camps. Alongside miners, the town attracted the attention of a Denver railroad company with the ambition to build a track up this formidable canyon.

Eight years later, the inaugural train from Durango, operated by the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad, arrived in Silverton. This extraordinary achievement was a testimony to the ability of 19th century engineers. By 1883, Silverton boasted a population of 2,000, featuring 400 buildings, including two banks, five laundries, 29 saloons, hotels, and the notorious red-light district, Blair Street.

Sitting proudly at 9300 ft, Silverton is hard enough to reach by car in 2025. Whenever I travel up to this gem of a town, I raise my glass to the fortitude and courage of final frontier capitalists and, of course, the railroad workers themselves. There can only be a few train journeys in the world that evoke a greater sense of 19th century human ambition.

The beauty and grandeur of the canyon up to Silverton makes the railroad one of the world’s great visual treats.

The world was introduced to it through Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid way back in 1969 and ever since I first filmed there five years ago, I have been fixated.

In this shot, we staged a robbery high up in the canyon. We know our angles and our lighting and we know the cowboys we can trust on top of that historic train.”

– David Yarrow

Available sizes

Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

  • Image Size: 56″ x 57″ in (142 x 145 cm)
  • Framed Image: 71″ x 72″ in (180 x 183 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.


    El Rancho

    El Rancho

    Durango, Colorado

    Archival Pigment Print

    Most American mountain towns have a saloon that is such an integral part of the fabric of the community, that the owners are bestowed special status in town. It is a long-standing irony of final frontier main streets that they cannot survive without law and order, but equally they cannot survive without the watering holes in which that law and order deteriorate. These bars tend to have longevity, along with a whiff of notoriety. The longer the bar has opened its doors to the public, the more chance that it has hosted every type of vice imaginable.

    El Rancho in Durango, with its secret underground tunnels that hosted gambling, prostitutes and illicit liquor trafficking, is one such bar and its owners, Chip and Chris Lile, are popular figures in town. It has a palpable vibe to it, which is elevated by the wall murals and the tree’s branches that fuse seamlessly into the Brunswick bar. In its 80-year life, the walls of El Rancho have seen most things and the underground caves have presumably seen an awful lot more. From a photographic point of view, the ambient light during the day is very generous at the street side part of the bar and that allowed me to freeze the big black wolf as he strolled down the bar. It was a fleeting moment in a lauded watering hole.

    Available sizes

    Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

    • Image Size: 56” x 90” in (142.2 cm x 228.6 cm)
    • Framed Image: 71” x 105” in (180.3 cm x 266.7 cm)

    Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

    • Image Size: 37” x 60” in (93.98 cm x 152.4 cm)
    • Framed Image: 52” x 75” in (132.1 cm x 190.5 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.


      The Outlaws

      The Outlaws

      Telluride, Colorado – 2023

      Archival Pigment Print

      “This photograph has a palpable sense of place, and the heavy overnight snowfall lends a mood to the story. We know this train track and the dramatic cutting well, and film scholars will also be familiar with the location from Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

      My idea was to have a wide enough frame to include outlaws on the slopes which grandly saddle the train track below. However, this was no easy ride for the cowboys as the heavy snow also covers big boulders and rocks that are impossible to detect until it is too late. There in lay the riddle of this photograph, in that the more virginal the snow, the stronger the likely visual, but also the harder the execution. It always tends to be that way, and we would prefer tough execution and good conditions than the other way around.

      The Iron horse played an integral role in the mythological lore of the Wild West, and in this instance, I wanted my camera to dive into the pages of a Western storybook. This was an untamed and loosely governed wilderness occupied by tough men with merciless traits. That was my story – the beauty of frontier landscapes was often coupled with trouble and danger.

      I would like to thank all those who helped that cold morning in Colorado, especially Al Harper and his team in Durango. Without the full partnership of the train company, this idea would have been fanciful at best. As it was, everyone did their job, and we left town with a special image.” – David Yarrow

      Available sizes

      Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

      • Image Size: 56” x 88” in (142.2 cm x 223.5 cm)
      • Framed Image: 71” x 103” in (180.3 cm x 261.6 cm)

      Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

      • Image Size: 37” x 58” in (93.98 cm x 147.3 cm)
      • Framed Image: 52” x 73” in (132.1 cm x 185.4 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.


        Parts Unknown II (B&W) | David Yarrow

        Parts Unknown II

        Durango, Colorado – 2023

        When we shoot in the winter, weather plays a large part in our planning, but given the speed at which weather can change, it does not pay to be too prescriptive too far out from shooting days. But we continually check weather patterns and within 36 hours of a shoot, we tend to home in on a certain plan.

        There are, I guess, four or five weather possibilities in the winter: melting snow and sunny, which is horrid; cold and sunny, which is better but restricts filming time; a snowstorm, which is exciting, but can impair detail or, ideally, the end of a big snow fall.

        In the Rockies, I guess there are about a dozen days a year when a big storm passes through and clears, leaving behind a winter wonderland and kind gentle light. This is the film maker’s big opportunity, provided the props are in place and access is still possible. It is always challenging, but these are the days we wait for. They don’t come that often.

        We know the Durango to Silverton steam train well and have built up a strong friendship with the owner Al Harper and his wonderful team of engineers in Durango. I sensed there was an opportunity at this jaw dropping location made famous by its appearance some 50 years ago in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. We were in town and waiting as the storm system pushed through. It had lasted 36 hours and left 18 inches of new snow in the San Juan Forest that the old steam train cuts through.

        We had to operate fast, as the light was picking up all the time and both teams worked quickly to get everyone in position early in the day. The Native American and the horse had the toughest job – that was no easy brief that day.

        When I look at this photograph, I feel some sense of pride, it is a hell of a shot. But not pride in myself, pride in all the people that made it happen. A real team effort.

        Available sizes

        LARGE: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
        • Image size: 56" x 70" in (142.2 cm x 177.8 cm)
        • Framed Image: 71" x 85" in (180.3 cm x 215.9 cm)
        STANDARD: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
        • Image size: 46" x 37" in (116.8 cm x 93.98 cm)
        • Framed Image: 61" x 52" in (154.9 cm x 190.5 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.


          Cara and the Robbers

          Cara and the Robbers

          Durango, Colorado – 2023

          Photographing a famous person next to something visually outstanding represents a riddle as there must be a debate as to which subject to deprioritize.

          The best images tend to favor, both subjects equally – an example perhaps being Diana Spencer – the then Princess of Wales – against the backdrop of the Taj Mahal. She is dwarfed by the magnificence of what is behind her but is central and pivotal to the story.

          Cara Delevingne cannot be taken up to a remote forest, fresh in new snow and then asked to play a secondary role. She has too powerful a look to be relegated to the role of a contextual extra, but equally, the Durango Steam train in winter is one of the great props a storytelling photographer can have. In scouting the journey the day after an intense snowstorm, I found a spot that I thought could offer a balance; I would just need Cara to be strong and sure footed on the banks of a river in a huge amount of fresh snow.

          There is a confident swagger to her and my best narrative was that she could be celebrating a robbery before it had even occurred – hence the cigar in her mouth. She can smoke a cigar like the best gambler in Vegas.

          It was a cold afternoon that day. This was no studio and as always, it was an honor to work with Cara, she is one of the very best in the business. It’s not a bad backdrop either.

          Available sizes

          LARGE: Edition of 20 + 3 AP
          • Image size: 56" x 71" in (142.2 cm x 180.3 cm)
          • Framed Image: 71" x 86" in (180.3 cm x 218.4 cm)
          STANDARD: Edition of 20 + 3 AP
          • Image size: 37" x 47" in (93.98 cm x 119.4 cm)
          • Framed Image: 52" x 62" in (132.1 cm x 157.5 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.


            Parts Unknown

            Parts Unknown

            Durango, Colorado – 2023

            When we shoot in the winter, weather plays a large part in our planning, but given the speed at which weather can change, it does not pay to be too prescriptive too far out from shooting days. But we continually check weather patterns and within 36 hours of a shoot, we tend to home in on a certain plan.

            There are, I guess, four or five weather possibilities in the winter: melting snow and sunny, which is horrid; cold and sunny, which is better but restricts filming time; a snowstorm, which is exciting, but can impair detail or, ideally, the end of a big snow fall.

            In the Rockies, I guess there are about a dozen days a year when a big storm passes through and clears, leaving behind a winter wonderland and kind gentle light. This is the film maker’s big opportunity, provided the props are in place and access is still possible. It is always challenging, but these are the days we wait for. They don’t come that often.

            We know the Durango to Silverton steam train well and have built up a strong friendship with the owner Al Harper and his wonderful team of engineers in Durango. I sensed there was an opportunity at this jaw dropping location made famous by its appearance some 50 years ago in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. We were in town and waiting as the storm system pushed through. It had lasted 36 hours and left 18 inches of new snow in the San Juan Forest that the old steam train cuts through.

            We had to operate fast, as the light was picking up all the time and both teams worked quickly to get everyone in position early in the day. The Native American and the horse had the toughest job – that was no easy brief that day.

            When I look at this photograph, I feel some sense of pride, it is a hell of a shot. But not pride in myself, pride in all the people that made it happen. A real team effort.

            Available sizes

            LARGE: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
            • Image size: 69" x 56" in (175.3 cm x 142.2 cm)
            • Framed Image: 84" x 71" in (213.4 cm x 180.3 cm)
            STANDARD: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
            • Image size: 46" x 37" in (116.8 cm x 93.98 cm)
            • Framed Image: 61" x 52" in (154.9 cm x 190.5 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.


              Red Dead

              Red Dead

              Durango, Colorado – 2023

              In the mountains of America, my experience is that the really cold conditions tend to be on cloudless days first thing in the morning, particularly at sunrise when the temperature briefly dips. Operating when it is frigid is a real examination, not just of one’s hunger to get the shot but one’s fluency with the camera. Hand warmers are such a wonderful invention.

              This morning, up on the Durango & Silverton narrow gauge railroad, was one such occasion. The storm had cleared and was replaced
              by a cloudless sky and frigid temperatures. At sunrise we were down to around -15°F or -26°C and these conditions offered so much potential for the filmmaker as everything froze – from human beards and human breath to horse breath.

              I am always nervous of boring people and anything in a picture that defies gravity tends to work for me as it adds energy and dynamism. The props I had that morning gave every chance to fully embrace this modus operandi – especially if my camera was pointed directly either side of the rising sun.

              My cowboy – who is a dead ringer for Rip from the Yellowstone Series – is a charming Texan called Cole Nallion rather than Cole Hauser who plays Rip Wheeler. Cole worked as a cowboy extra and handler in another Taylor Sheridan series – 1883 – and it is easy to see why he and Sam Elliott got along.

              This one split second image caught my notice straight away as there is an anonymity to his face. We don’t need to see his eyes, because this is not a story about him per se, it is a story about the loosely governed wild west, where cowboys like him often made a living from doing shady things. He is playing to a genre before he is playing himself.

              The photograph has a Red Dead Redemption feel to it and the bigger it is printed the more powerful the emotion it elicits. It’s a bad ass moment.

              Available sizes

              LARGE: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
              • Image size: 63" x 56" in (160 cm x 142.2 cm)
              • Framed Image: 78" x 71" in (198.1 cm x 180.3 cm)
              STANDARD: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
              • Image size: 42" x 37" in (106.7 cm x 93.98 cm)
              • Framed Image: 57" x 52" in (144.8 cm x 190.5 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.


                Reservoir Dogs

                Reservoir Dogs

                Durango, Colorado – 2023

                I am not ashamed of the fact that I often have an audience in my mind when I take a shot. In this case in the Diamond Belle Saloon in Durango, Colorado, my instincts were that it would appeal more if the frame was busy because my experience with this famous old wild west bar is that it is always something of a gathering place for all those who like a drink. It is how bars should be and is celebrated as such. I want the audience to say; “I wish I was in that bar that night” or even “we need more interesting people in our bar”. This frame sweats and that was always my intent.

                Anyone close to my camera had to be characters out of a story book and play to the lore of the wild west. I want to exaggerate not dumb things down as that helps the storyteller. In a staged image such as this, there is no need to ask permission to be creative; in fact, it is a necessary precondition.

                Cara Delevingne’s face is so strong and powerful that I knew there was no room for another girl on her same focal plane, but there would be room for a black wolf and then a menacing poker player. The background could then look after itself, but I wanted to pay homage to the saloon girls who are synonymous with the bar.

                Cara loves this image – which always matters to me. She is a gift for a photographer and not to fully capitalize on her eyes and her vibe would be a rookie error.

                Available sizes

                LARGE: Edition of 20 + 3 AP
                • Image size: 56" x 91" in (142.2 cm x 231.1 cm)
                • Framed Image: 71" x 106" in (180.3 cm x 269.2 cm)
                STANDARD: Edition of 20 + 3 AP
                • Image size: 37" x 60" in (93.98 cm x 152.4 cm)
                • Framed Image: 52" x 75" in (132.1 cm x 190.5 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.


                  Manifest Destiny

                  Manifest Destiny

                  Durango, Colorado – 2023

                  “Other nations have tried to check the fulfillment of our manifest destiny to overspread the continent allotted by providence for the free development of our yearly multiplying millions.

                  It was in 1845 that John Louis O’Sullivan, a popular columnist, articulated the long-standing American belief in the God-given mission of the United States to expand across North America all the way to the Pacific Ocean. In so doing he coined the term “Manifest Destiny”.

                  There was a sense of unbridled purpose. Nothing would get in their way: forests would be cut; mountains carved and railroads built. 60 million bison were culled and replaced by cattle. Native Americans faced an existential crisis.

                  Some tribes, of course, fought, whilst others negotiated. There was heavy loss of life on both sides and there is irony now that this period of nation building is deeply uncomfortable for many current day Americans. What created the wealthiest country in the world is not something to celebrate.

                  Railroads were an integral part of the Manifest Destiny and undermined the sovereignty of Native nations. Their construction threatened to destroy indigenous communities and their cultures as the railroad expanded into territories inhabited by Native Americans.

                  But for all that, encounters between steam trains and Native Americans were not necessarily as Hollywood has depicted. There was not much conflict and indigenous people mostly watched the railroad construction with a degree of fascination. Indeed, some found themselves drawn into a closer relationship with settlers because of the commercial opportunities that came with railroad construction. There was collaboration and often Native Americans offered protection from bandits.

                  19th century artists often depicted Native Americans as passive contextual narrative in railroad images; they are present but only to frame the story, not make the story. They simply establish the scene. This was my intent one cold February morning at Horseshoe Bend on the famous Durango & Silverton Railroad high in the San Jose Mountains. The Native American is not on the bend to attack, he is there simply to proudly show his presence. It is for the viewer to imagine how the next five minutes unfolded.

                  A great deal of logistical teamwork enabled this opportunity that cold sunny morning and the result is a strong photograph. As always it is a big team effort to create work like this.

                  Available sizes

                  LARGE: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
                  • Image size: 56" x 60" in (142.2 cm x 152.4 cm)
                  • Framed Image: 71" x 75" in (180.3 cm x 190.5 cm)
                  STANDARD: Edition of 12 + 3 AP
                  • Image size: 37" x 40" in (93.98 cm x 101.6 cm)
                  • Framed Image: 52" x 55" in (132.1 cm x 139.7 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.


                    Vantage Point

                    Silverton, Colorado, USA – 2021

                    In post Civil War America, some saw the railroad as a symbol of modernity and national progress. For others, however, the Transcontinental Railroad undermined the sovereignty of Native nations and threatened to destroy Indigenous communities and their cultures as the railroad expanded into territories inhabited solely by Native Americans.
                    As part of my photographic anthology on the wild west, it was always my intent to bring native Indians and a railroad together into an image, but I had no wish to objectify either party. A photograph for instance of a hostile railroad attack by a party of Indians could be labelled as stereotyping or indeed being blind to the provocation of what was effectively an invasion by American settlers, prospectors and capitalists. We entered this project to tell stories, not make overtly political points.
                    After several scouting trips, I found an ideal location 10,000 feet above sea level on the track near Silverton, Colorado. The train owners told us that this section of the track had never been shot before and that sense of ground breaking always gives me a warm glow.
                    The high cliff face offered a sense of a vantage point and the opportunity for the camera to tell a more passive observation story (albeit with a little attitude).
                    The narrative seems entirely realistic as most of the time the natives would observe the Iron Horses from a safe distance with a mixture of fear; anger but also, I would imagine a hint of bewilderment. The driver of the steam train did a fabulous job with the flume – it was a magical sight to see.

                    AVAILABLE SIZES:

                    Standard

                    • Image size: 37" x 50"
                    • Framed with a 3" mat: 48" x 61"
                    • Framed with a 5" mat: 52" x 65"

                    Large

                    • Image size: 56" x 74"
                    • Framed with a 3" mat: 67" x 85"
                    • Framed with a 5" mat: 71" x 89”

                    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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