007 - colour

007 (Colour)

GLENCOE, SCOTLAND – 2025

Archival Pigment Print

The entrance to the Glencoe pass in Scotland offers a volcanic amphitheatre in all weather conditions, but at the denouement of a snow storm there is a haunting menace to Buachaille Etive Mor, the cone shaped monolith that rises vertically to the west of the A82. This is a place where many bad things have happened over the years and the rawness of the topography gives a symbolic nod to that. Glencoe is not a place of lavender fields and sun kissed meadows; it is a primeval geological aberration of granite rock.

The pass is one of the most arresting visuals in the UK and I have filmed up here many times over the years. Of course, I am far from alone and the   celebrated film director – Sam Mendes – chose Glencoe as a key location for Skyfall in 2012. I am sure his decision was influenced by the fact that the Fleming family has, for four generations, lived in the region and Ian Fleming himself spent many a day in the shooting lodge just 45 miles down the road to Glen Etive. This is most emphatically Bond country.

From the single-track West Highland Way running parallel to the main road, we were able to offer a sense of journey to Bond’s DB5 and the other props came to mind quite naturally. At first light, the red telephone box certainly popped against such a formidable backdrop and we had made sure the lighting inside the box was functional. That made all the difference and we are again reminded that it’s often the small things.

The strongest photographs have an emphatic sense of place and conveying this was acutely necessary to do justice to both the destination and the Bond parody. We did get lucky with the weather and also, I want to thank the Fleming family and the Alba police force for their help with this project. It was not a bad few days to spend in pursuit of my craft.

Available sizes

Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

  • Image Size: 47” x 103” in (119.4 cm x 261.6 cm)
  • Framed Image: 62” x 118” in (157.5 cm x 299.7 cm)

Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

  • Image Size: 31” x 69” in (78.74 cm x 175.3 cm)
  • Framed Image: 46” x84” in (116.8 cm x 213.4 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.


    Bond

    Bond

    GLENCOE, SCOTLAND – 2025

    Archival Pigment Print

    Glencoe offers one of Scotland’s grandest locations, especially at the denouement of a winter storm. This panoramic was taken about 20 minutes after the snow had stopped fallen and clouds still covered the cone shaped volcanic monolith of Buachaille Etive; there is an emphatic sense of place and sense of mood. We were very fortunate to be here in these conditions and we were all very rather humbled by the vista in front of us.

    This is the celebrated gateway to the Scottish Highlands and a land known not just for its natural beauty, but for its bloody past, particularly the Clan feuds between the MacDonalds and the Campbells. The drive through Glencoe encourages a silent historical musing as intense as any road I know in the world. Shit happened here.

    But there is also an untamed regality to the region that has long drawnfilmmakers and, of course, this goes full circle, as this remote part of the world has long been associated with the Fleming family and particularly Ian Fleming – the creator of James Bond. He lived here before moving to Jamaica in 1946.

    A pivotal sequence in the 2012 Bond movie “Skyfall” was shot on the road down from the A82 to what was Ian Fleming’s nephew’s shooting lodge – Dalness. The location was well chosen and all those that are drawn to the mournful beauty of Scotland, appreciated the subtle alchemy between Bond’s DB5 and the quintessential Highland topography. I doubt any other Bond location has as many daily visitors as that Glen Etive Road.

    This photograph was taken near the entrance to that road on the West Highland Way. We had watched the weather forecast every day for 10 daysbefore the shoot and not in our wildest dreams did we ever expect the light and the snow cover to be this kind to us. We still had to move quickly with the props and I had to find compositional balance in my frame, but the weather was the transcending component. We were back at Dalness for breakfast.

    This photograph is personal. Scotland is my home and I think we did Glencoe proud. No wonder Sam Mendes chose to shoot here in the Skyfall movie and the truth is that we got luckier than him with the weather.

    I would like to thank the Alba Police force and Phil Fleming for their help in making this shoot happen.

    Available sizes

    Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

    • Image Size: 38” x 102” in (96.52 cm x 259.1 cm)
    • Framed Image: 53” x 117” in (134.6 cm x 297.2 cm)

    Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

    • Image Size: 29” x 77” in (73.66 cm x 195.6 cm)
    • Framed Image: 44” x 92” in (111.8 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.


      Bond - Colour

      Bond (Colour)

      GLENCOE, SCOTLAND – 2025

      Archival Pigment Print

      Glencoe offers one of Scotland’s grandest locations, especially at the denouement of a winter storm. This panoramic was taken about 20 minutes after the snow had stopped fallen and clouds still covered the cone shaped volcanic monolith of Buachaille Etive; there is an emphatic sense of place and sense of mood. We were very fortunate to be here in these conditions and we were all very rather humbled by the vista in front of us.

      This is the celebrated gateway to the Scottish Highlands and a land known not just for its natural beauty, but for its bloody past, particularly the Clan feuds between the MacDonalds and the Campbells. The drive through Glencoe encourages a silent historical musing as intense as any road I know in the world. Shit happened here.

      But there is also an untamed regality to the region that has long drawnfilmmakers and, of course, this goes full circle, as this remote part of the world has long been associated with the Fleming family and particularly Ian Fleming – the creator of James Bond. He lived here before moving to Jamaica in 1946.

      A pivotal sequence in the 2012 Bond movie “Skyfall” was shot on the road down from the A82 to what was Ian Fleming’s nephew’s shooting lodge – Dalness. The location was well chosen and all those that are drawn to the mournful beauty of Scotland, appreciated the subtle alchemy between Bond’s DB5 and the quintessential Highland topography. I doubt any other Bond location has as many daily visitors as that Glen Etive Road.

      This photograph was taken near the entrance to that road on the West Highland Way. We had watched the weather forecast every day for 10 daysbefore the shoot and not in our wildest dreams did we ever expect the light and the snow cover to be this kind to us. We still had to move quickly with the props and I had to find compositional balance in my frame, but the weather was the transcending component. We were back at Dalness for breakfast.

      This photograph is personal. Scotland is my home and I think we did Glencoe proud. No wonder Sam Mendes chose to shoot here in the Skyfall movie and the truth is that we got luckier than him with the weather.

      I would like to thank the Alba Police force and Phil Fleming for their help in making this shoot happen.

      Available sizes

      Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

      • Image Size: 38” x 102” in (96.52 cm x 259.1 cm)
      • Framed Image: 53” x 117” in (134.6 cm x 297.2 cm)

      Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

      • Image Size: 29” x 77” in (73.66 cm x 195.6 cm)
      • Framed Image: 44” x 92” in (111.8 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.


        skyfall - colour

        Skyfall (Colour)

        GLENCOE, SCOTLAND – 2025

        Archival Pigment Print

        Glencoe offers one of Scotland’s grandest locations, especially at the denouement of a winter storm. The cone shaped volcanic monolith of Buachaille Etive stands proud at the entrance as if it was a white hatted sentry guarding the national treasures in the glen beyond. This is the celebrated gateway to the Scottish Highlands and a land known not just for its natural beauty, but for its bloody past, particularly the Clan feuds between the MacDonalds and the Campbells. The drive through Glencoe encourages a silent historical musing as intense as any road I know in the world. Shit happened here.

        But there is also an untamed regality to the region that has long drawn filmmakers and, of course, this goes full circle, as this remote part of the world has long been associated with the Fleming family and particularly Ian Fleming – the creator of James Bond. He lived here before moving to Jamaica in 1946. A pivotal sequence in the 2012 Bond movie “Skyfall” was shot on the road down from the A82 to what was Ian Fleming’s nephew’s shooting lodge – Dalness. The location was well chosen and all those that are drawn to the mournful beauty of Scotland, appreciated the subtle alchemy between Bond’s DB5 and the quintessential Highland topography. I doubt any other Bond location has as many daily visitors as that Glen Etive Road.

        This panoramic was taken near the entrance to that road on the West Highland Way. We had watched the weather forecast every day for 10 days before the shoot and not in our wildest dreams did we ever expect the light and the snow cover to be this kind to us. We still had to move quickly with the props and I had to find compositional balance in my frame, but the weather was the transcending component. We were back at Dalness for breakfast. This photograph is personal. Scotland is my home and I think we did Glencoe proud. No wonder Sam Mendes chose to shoot here in the Skyfall movie and the truth is that we got luckier than him with the weather.

        I would like to thank the Alba Police force and Phil Fleming for their help in making this shoot happen.

        Available sizes

        Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

        • Image Size: 36” x 103” in (68.58 cm x 261.6 cm)
        • Framed Image: 51” x 118” in (129.5 cm x 299.7 cm)

        Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

        • Image Size: 27” x 78” in (68.58 cm x 198.1 cm)
        • Framed Image: 42” x 93” in (106.7 cm x 236.2 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.


          Last Christmas

          Last Christmas

          Telluride, Colorado- 2024

          Archival Pigment Print

          “The main street in Telluride looking west towards the colossal mountain that will bully it forever, is one of America’s great visual overloads. That is why every year hundreds of thousands of tourists stand where I knelt to take a picture. Like the Grand Canyon and Monument Valley, it is a ground zero for selfies and maybe the location deserves a little better. It should elicit not just our phone’s attention, but a deep respect for Americana and the Final Frontier. The fact that a 150 years ago a village was built up here at 9,000 feet in Box Canyon is a telling insight into the determination of the first settlers.

          I have filmed on Main Street a few times, but never with a car and I sensed that there could be potential to tell a period story. In my creative processing I built in a few key components: a classic car; an empty and snow caked street with no signs of modernity and a model whose styling played to the era of the car. If that was not greedy enough, I needed my wolf – Klondike. I wanted parody as well as glamour.

          Closing down that street is not easy and I am hugely appreciative of the Major of Telluride – Teddy Errico – and his staff for their support on 14th December 2024. Without the film permit, the road closure and the parking restrictions, there was no picture.

          But the best photographs always come down to the last 1% and on this occasion the key 1% was just luck. The early morning temperature, on that one morning when we were permitted to close the street and bring in my cast, led by the beautiful Josie Canseco, turned out to be the coldest of the winter so far and that changed every visual dynamic. At dawn it was only about 10 °F and the extreme cold amplified the heavy exhaust fumes from the 1955 Austin Healey. This offered an opportunity to isolate the model from the backdrop and elevate the photograph. It was not something that I had considered in my planning, but I will most certainly take it.” – David Yarrow

          Available sizes

          Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

          • Image Size: 56” x 56” in (210.8 cm x 210.8 cm)
          • Framed Image: 71” x 71” in (248.9 cm x 248.9 cm)

          Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

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


            Driving Home For Christmas (Colour)

            Driving Home For Christmas (Colour)

            Lake Tahoe, California – 2024

            Archival Pigment Print

            “I had this photograph in my mind for a good year or two before I took it. Mountain roads with snow tunnels this high are not easy to find and even then, filming on them can be a logistical challenge as there are always going to be other cars on the road.

            Our research led us to a mountain area near Lake Tahoe that always has high accumulation of snow throughout the winter. But my ambition of bringing in a 1953 Ferrari and a wolf to the set took the production effort to a challenging level. The car was worth around $12m and we certainly didn’t need any accidents, but we simply had to use it; it is so beautiful.

            My default position is to make my work as attention grabbing as possible – and since I tend to make photographs rather than take them – the key is always in the preparation. As I saw the frame develop in my head, I imagined this is a colour photograph, as the burgundy of the Ferrari would pop against the white of the snow; if there was a bend in the road, we could use that to make the backdrop as uniform as possible.

            I guess this photograph has a fairytale vibe and that was my intent. She is simply driving home for Christmas.

            Brooks Nader is so good to work with; she is family to us and smashes every role we give her”. – David Yarrow

            Available sizes

            Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

            • Image Size: 56” x 92” in (142.2 cm x 233.7 cm)
            • Framed Image: 71” x 107” in (180.3 cm x 271.8 cm)

            Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

            • Image Size: 37” x 61” in (93.98 cm x 154.9 cm)
            • Framed Image: 52” x 76” in (132.1 cm x 193 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.


              Driving Home For Christmas (B&W)

              Driving Home For Christmas (B&W)

              Lake Tahoe, California – 2024

              Archival Pigment Print

              “I had this photograph in my mind for a good year or two before I took it. Mountain roads with snow tunnels this high are not easy to find and even then, filming on them can be a logistical challenge as there are always going to be other cars on the road.

              Our research led us to a mountain area near Lake Tahoe that always has high accumulation of snow throughout the winter. But my ambition of bringing in a 1953 Ferrari and a wolf to the set took the production effort to a challenging level. The car was worth around $12m and we certainly didn’t need any accidents, but we simply had to use it; it is so beautiful.

              My default position is to make my work as attention grabbing as possible – and since I tend to make photographs rather than take them – the key is always in the preparation. As I saw the frame develop in my head, I imagined this is a colour photograph, as the burgundy of the Ferrari would pop against the white of the snow; if there was a bend in the road, we could use that to make the backdrop as uniform as possible.

              I guess this photograph has a fairytale vibe and that was my intent. She is simply driving home for Christmas.

              Brooks Nader is so good to work with; she is family to us and smashes every role we give her”. – David Yarrow

              Available sizes

              Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

              • Image Size: 56” x 92” in (142.2 cm x 233.7 cm)
              • Framed Image: 71” x 107” in (180.3 cm x 271.8 cm)

              Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

              • Image Size: 37” x 61” in (93.98 cm x 154.9 cm)
              • Framed Image: 52” x 76” in (132.1 cm x 193 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.


                Bad Asses (Colour)

                Bad Asses (Colour)

                Kanaan Desert, Namibia – 2024

                Archival Pigment Print

                “This eye grabbing photograph has been in my head for many years. We have taken our fair share of bad ass pictures of girls in cars in America, but I always wanted to extend my reach to Africa and introduce a Mad Max type narrative. Rather than working in the mountains with snow, as we often do, it was time to work in the desert with sand.

                I knew my girl for the shot – Cara Delevingne – and I knew that the hugely respected Naankuse Sanctuary in Namibia often work their cheetahs with film crews, and then I also knew the Kanaan desert well. But I needed a central prop to hold the whole idea together. I needed something of substance.

                I had long deliberated over building a bar marooned in the middle of the desert. Not just a two-dimensional facade of a bar, but an actual functioning bar, with lights, cooling machines and entertainment.

                I confess that there was quite a bit of talking to myself about the risk reward ratio and I became all to mindful of Walt Disney’s famous advice of “stop talking and start doing”. I like to have creative courage and be bold.

                So, I threw my fears away and we built our bar in the desert. It is so damn good that we are going to keep it there for tourists to visit and perhaps have a cold Namibian lager. It was not a small building job and six lorries full of wood and corrugated iron made the eight-hour trip south from Windhoek. I have never worked with a more willing bunch of people in my life than the Namibian production team and they had earned the right to be very proud of The Desert Inn.

                In a tableau photograph like this, I want to be greedy and broaden the story: the barman and the bushman on the far right are the little details that help. Cara looks sensational and, of course, that split second pose from the cheetah makes the photograph what it is. It is a bad ass shot for sure and it is also a bad ass bar.” – David Yarrow

                Available sizes

                Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

                • Image Size: 49” x 103” in (124.5 cm x 261.6 cm)
                • Framed Image: 64” x 118” in (162.6 cm x 299.7 cm)

                Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

                • Image Size: 37” x 78” in (93.98 cm x 198.1 cm)
                • Framed Image: 52” x 93” in (132.1 cm x 236.2 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.


                  Bad Asses (B&W)

                  Bad Asses

                  Kanaan Desert, Namibia – 2024

                  Archival Pigment Print

                  “This eye grabbing photograph has been in my head for many years. We have taken our fair share of bad ass pictures of girls in cars in America, but I always wanted to extend my reach to Africa and introduce a Mad Max type narrative. Rather than working in the mountains with snow, as we often do, it was time to work in the desert with sand.

                  I knew my girl for the shot – Cara Delevingne – and I knew that the hugely respected Naankuse Sanctuary in Namibia often work their cheetahs with film crews, and then I also knew the Kanaan desert well. But I needed a central prop to hold the whole idea together. I needed something of substance.

                  I had long deliberated over building a bar marooned in the middle of the desert. Not just a two-dimensional facade of a bar, but an actual functioning bar, with lights, cooling machines and entertainment.

                  I confess that there was quite a bit of talking to myself about the risk reward ratio and I became all to mindful of Walt Disney’s famous advice of “stop talking and start doing”. I like to have creative courage and be bold.

                  So, I threw my fears away and we built our bar in the desert. It is so damn good that we are going to keep it there for tourists to visit and perhaps have a cold Namibian lager. It was not a small building job and six lorries full of wood and corrugated iron made the eight-hour trip south from Windhoek. I have never worked with a more willing bunch of people in my life than the Namibian production team and they had earned the right to be very proud of The Desert Inn.

                  In a tableau photograph like this, I want to be greedy and broaden the story: the barman and the bushman on the far right are the little details that help. Cara looks sensational and, of course, that split second pose from the cheetah makes the photograph what it is. It is a bad ass shot for sure and it is also a bad ass bar.” – David Yarrow

                  Available sizes

                  Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

                  • Image Size: 49” x 103” in (124.5 cm x 261.6 cm)
                  • Framed Image: 64” x 118” in (162.6 cm x 299.7 cm)

                  Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

                  • Image Size: 37” x 78” in (93.98 cm x 198.1 cm)
                  • Framed Image: 52” x 93” in (132.1 cm x 236.2 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 Last Days of Summer

                    The Last Days of Summer

                    Capri, Italy – 2024

                    Archival Pigment Print

                    “No island in the world elicits a greater sense of golden idleness and a freewheeling love of the pleasures of life than the Italian island of Capri. As far back as 500 BC, the Greeks saw it as a rocky paradise of hedonism and much more recently they were followed by the Marquis de Sade and Oscar Wilde. Even if only half the stories of the debauchery in Capri are true, it has been a good host island to those who believe that life is for living.

                    There is a unique beauty to the place and a refined simplicity that seduced Hollywood in the 1950s and Jacqueline Kennedy not long after. I sense that Capri does not have to try too hard, because it doesn’t really need to; everything is there and most of it always will be. There is security in the longevity of tenure.

                    The island’s greatest trick is to offer a sense of belonging to visitors. Our cousins from across the pond, who come every year in their thousands, call it “little America”. That’s quite a stretch, but no doubt there is a century long love affair between America and Capri.

                    The island’s iconic rock formation – The Faraglioni – is the geological pantheon of the island and I knew that at some stage this summer I would use its vertical grandeur as a backdrop in my European storytelling. Of course, these sea stacks are over photographed, and I needed a fresh foreground that played to the lore of the island. It takes time to determine the right location to shoot from as so many angles have become a little generic.

                    There is one land location near Marina Piccola where I could take an old Vespa and this was a shot I hadn’t seen before. Logistically it’s not that easy to get access with a bike. Just after sunrise, the rocks are kissed from behind by gentle sunlight and I knew that if I shot into the rising sun, I could engineer a rather dreamy canvas.

                    The girls played their roles exactly as directed: I wanted both sexual confidence and a sense that their behaviour was not always coming from the highest moral drawer. That would be fitting for an island blessed by an intoxicating sense of fun and freedom.” – David Yarrow

                    Available sizes

                    Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

                    • Image Size: 56” x 103” in (142.2 cm x 261.6 cm)
                    • Framed Image: 71” x 118” in (180.3 cm x 299.7 cm)

                    Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

                    • Image Size: 37” x 71” in (93.98 cm x 180.3 cm)
                    • Framed Image: 52” x 86” in (132.1 cm x 218.4 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.


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