Wellington by David Yarrow – Equestrian Fine Art Color Photograph – Available at Hilton Contemporary Gallery Chicago

Wellington (Colour)

Wellington, Florida – 2025

“If polo is the sport of Kings, then Wellington in Florida is its Winter Palace. In these green pastures incongruously close to the Atlantic beaches, a few modest horse rings have evolved into the world’s largest and longest competitive equestrian festival. Lauded riders convene to compete at many disciplines and a vast temporary community congregates each January to celebrate their love of horses and, to a large extent, each other.

It is a social carnival but it would be wrong to dismiss Wellington as simply being an ancillary part of the Palm Beach society circuit; serious money is involved at every level of this food chain. This is where show jumpers earn their crust and where polo players make their reputations. If Detroit is the home of the American car industry, then Wellington is the home of its horse industry. And it is very much an industry. There is more work going on in Wellington than in Palm Beach but it is horse work.

In our travels, we have been fortunate to meet both the Hildenbrand family and the Ganzi family who are key cogs within the world of competitive polo. They were both very supportive of my plans to do an equestrian series in Wellington and offered the use of their stunning properties and polo fields.

I saw this is as a chance to directly use the community as extras – as I wanted to convey not only a sense of place, but also a sense of that exact community. Polo is not an obscure sport here; it is an integral part of the fabric of the place and attracts decent crowds to the big events.

It is a tribal sport to the extent that there is a way to dress and a way to behave and my instincts were that I needed to capture a sense of uniformity. Polo crowds are not like golf crowds or football crowds – they very much have their own identity.

I want to thank the Ganzi family and Michelle Marshall for their help that glorious spring evening in Wellington. Without their partnership, my camera would never have captured this moment in time.

-David Yarrow

Available Sizes:

Large - Edition of 12 + 3 AP

  • Unframed Size: 56" x 97" (142 x 246 cm)
  • Framed Size: 71" x 112" (180 x 284 cm)

Standard - Edition of 12 + 3 AP

  • Unframed Size: 37" x 64" (94 x 163 cm)
  • Framed Size: 52" x 79" (132 x 201)

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.


    Wellington by David Yarrow – Equestrian Fine Art Photograph – Available at Hilton Contemporary Gallery Chicago

    Wellington

    Wellington, Florida – 2025

    “If polo is the sport of Kings, then Wellington in Florida is its Winter Palace. In these green pastures incongruously close to the Atlantic beaches, a few modest horse rings have evolved into the world’s largest and longest competitive equestrian festival. Lauded riders convene to compete at many disciplines and a vast temporary community congregates each January to celebrate their love of horses and, to a large extent, each other.

    It is a social carnival but it would be wrong to dismiss Wellington as simply being an ancillary part of the Palm Beach society circuit; serious money is involved at every level of this food chain. This is where show jumpers earn their crust and where polo players make their reputations. If Detroit is the home of the American car industry, then Wellington is the home of its horse industry. And it is very much an industry. There is more work going on in Wellington than in Palm Beach but it is horse work.

    In our travels, we have been fortunate to meet both the Hildenbrand family and the Ganzi family who are key cogs within the world of competitive polo. They were both very supportive of my plans to do an equestrian series in Wellington and offered the use of their stunning properties and polo fields.

    I saw this is as a chance to directly use the community as extras – as I wanted to convey not only a sense of place, but also a sense of that exact community. Polo is not an obscure sport here; it is an integral part of the fabric of the place and attracts decent crowds to the big events.

    It is a tribal sport to the extent that there is a way to dress and a way to behave and my instincts were that I needed to capture a sense of uniformity. Polo crowds are not like golf crowds or football crowds – they very much have their own identity.

    I want to thank the Ganzi family and Michelle Marshall for their help that glorious spring evening in Wellington. Without their partnership, my camera would never have captured this moment in time.

    -David Yarrow

    Available Sizes:

    Large - Edition of 12 + 3 AP

    • Unframed Size: 56" x 97" (142 x 246 cm)
    • Framed Size: 71" x 112" (180 x 284 cm)

    Standard - Edition of 12 + 3 AP

    • Unframed Size: 37" x 64" (94 x 163 cm)
    • Framed Size: 52" x 79" (132 x 201)

    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.


      The Thomas Crown Affair by David Yarrow – Supermodels and Equestrian with Vintage Aston Martin Fine Art Photograph – Available at Hilton Contemporary Gallery Chicago

      The Thomas Crown Affair

      Wellington, Florida – 2025

      “Polo brings with it money, glamour and a whiff of naughtiness. There is something rather visceral and sexy about it all, a bit like being an art thief. Girls are drawn to Polo in a way they are not drawn to other big field sports such as cricket or baseball.

      Meanwhile, luxury brands like Rolex and LVMH may show mild interest in the duels on the field but are more excited by the audiences in front of whom the game is played. The talent on the horses is matched by the talent off the horses; not something that is true perhaps of any other professional sports. It is a complete scene and offers an insight into the rarefied lives of a few. Ralph Lauren understood that it was a microcosm of what some may assume to be a better life. The whole affair, like Thomas Crown’s, is deeply aspirational.

      This photograph works largely because of the flat light in Wellington, Florida that spring morning. It gives granularity not just to the 1950s Austin-Healey car and the girls, but the whole set. Sunlight always reduces depth and this story needed depth. There is an unmistakable sense of polo in Florida.

      There are many people to thank for making this picture happen and I am reminded, yet again, that the easiest part of the job is pressing the shutter. I had an idea, but we then needed to execute it and that required the support of many busy people.

      -David Yarrow

      Available Sizes:

      Large - Edition of 12 + 3 AP

      • Unframed Size: 56" x 103" (142 x 262 cm)
      • Framed Size: 71" x 118" (180 x 300 cm)

      Standard - Edition of 12 + 3 AP

      • Unframed Size: 37" x 68" (94 x 173 cm)
      • Framed Size: 52" x 83" (132 x 211)

      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.


        The Winner Takes It All by David Yarrow – Supermodels in front of a Vintage Car and Equestrian - Available at Hilton Contemporary Gallery Chicago

        The Winner Takes it All

        Wellington, Florida – 2025

        “In the winter months, Wellington, Florida becomes the showjumping capital of the world. It attracts the very best in the industry, from Olympic Gold medallists down to the most promising rookies on the circuit, and prize money at the flagship Rolex sponsored season finale now exceeds $750,000. It sometimes seems there are more horses than people in Wellington in March.

        The other venues of the Grand Prix circuit in France, Sweden, Italy, Belgium and Ireland attract the same cavalcade of riders, horses and sponsors but they don’t have Palm Beach as their immediate neighbour. Undoubtedly, the proximity of one of the world’s most rarified and idyllic communities has given Wellington an edge on the glamour and prestige front. The palm trees that encircle many of the venues also add an extra visual spark to the whole affair.

        We were lucky enough to be introduced to Emily Smith whose family are at the heart of Wellington’s showjumping community both socially and professionally. Emily not only fully embraced our plans to include these festivities in our Palm Beach series but also lent us her facilities and her son Spencer who is a successful and well-known show jumper.

        In the UK, I grew up reading Jilly Cooper’s raunchy novels about love, lust and rivalry in the horse world. She told stories that suggested the competition was just as fierce in the bedroom as it was in the horse ring. It was a licentious world where the leading show jumpers had many female admirers and sometimes found temptation too much.

        This vignette of Wellington plays to her narrative. But I know Spencer Smith – who is jumping the 7-foot fence in the photograph – to be a man of strong moral fibre and he would never allow his focus to be derailed in the same way as Jilly Cooper’s protagonists.”

        -David Yarrow

        Available Sizes:

        Large - Edition of 12 + 3 AP

        • Unframed Size: 56" x 91" (142 x 234 cm)
        • Framed Size: 71" x 107" (180 x 272 cm)

        Standard - Edition of 12 + 3 AP

        • Unframed Size: 37" x 61" (94 x 155 cm)
        • Framed Size: 52" x 76" (132 x 193)

        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.


          The Winner Takes It All by David Yarrow – Supermodels in front of a Vintage Car and Equestrian - In Color - Available at Hilton Contemporary Gallery Chicago

          The Winner Takes it All (Colour)

          Wellington, Florida – 2025

          “In the winter months, Wellington, Florida becomes the showjumping capital of the world. It attracts the very best in the industry, from Olympic Gold medallists down to the most promising rookies on the circuit, and prize money at the flagship Rolex sponsored season finale now exceeds $750,000. It sometimes seems there are more horses than people in Wellington in March.

          The other venues of the Grand Prix circuit in France, Sweden, Italy, Belgium and Ireland attract the same cavalcade of riders, horses and sponsors but they don’t have Palm Beach as their immediate neighbour. Undoubtedly, the proximity of one of the world’s most rarified and idyllic communities has given Wellington an edge on the glamour and prestige front. The palm trees that encircle many of the venues also add an extra visual spark to the whole affair.

          We were lucky enough to be introduced to Emily Smith whose family are at the heart of Wellington’s showjumping community both socially and professionally. Emily not only fully embraced our plans to include these festivities in our Palm Beach series but also lent us her facilities and her son Spencer who is a successful and well-known show jumper.

          In the UK, I grew up reading Jilly Cooper’s raunchy novels about love, lust and rivalry in the horse world. She told stories that suggested the competition was just as fierce in the bedroom as it was in the horse ring. It was a licentious world where the leading show jumpers had many female admirers and sometimes found temptation too much.

          This vignette of Wellington plays to her narrative. But I know Spencer Smith – who is jumping the 7-foot fence in the photograph – to be a man of strong moral fibre and he would never allow his focus to be derailed in the same way as Jilly Cooper’s protagonists.”

          -David Yarrow

          Available Sizes:

          Large - Edition of 12 + 3 AP

          • Unframed Size: 56" x 91" (142 x 234 cm)
          • Framed Size: 71" x 107" (180 x 272 cm)

          Standard - Edition of 12 + 3 AP

          • Unframed Size: 37" x 61" (94 x 155 cm)
          • Framed Size: 52" x 76" (132 x 193)

          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.


            Players (B&W)

            Players (B&W)

            Wellington, Florida – 2025

            Archival Pigment Print

            “My sense is that the leading figures in the equestrian capital of the world – Wellington, Florida – have game. This is not a place for meekness or routine existence, it is a community where life is attacked in an uncompromising way. People back themselves in Wellington and back themselves to win. Whether they be polo professionals, showjumpers, horse capitalists or team owners, this is a place of “Players”.

            If a great storyteller like Taylor Sheridan focused his pen and his creative rigour on a town like Wellington, I pondered what the posters for the TV series would look like. There would have to be a sense of place and meanwhile the protagonists would have sexual allure and a hint of mischief. The vibe would be far removed from one which focused on the repetitious and painful monotony of daily life that so many people have to endure. It would be a story of privilege, ambition, vice and sexual tension. That combination always makes for good TV.

            These tableaux photographs are always complicated by the introduction of animals into the narrative as they tend not to listen to my instructions. But pictures of Wellington without horses and dogs risk missing key parts of the jigsaw. Beautiful cars are also an integral part of the mix.

            I want to thank everyone who came along to participate in the shoot that spring evening in Wellington – it was a memorable and fun evening. Special thanks to the Ganzi family for hosting us at their beautiful polo facilities and entertaining all my frivolous nonsense.”

            -David Yarrow

            Available sizes

            Large: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

            • Image Size: 56″ x 96″ in (142 x 244 cm)
            • Framed Image: 71″ x 111″ in (180 x 282 cm)

            Standard: Edition of 12 + 3 AP

            • Image Size: 37″ x 64″ in (94 x 163 cm)
            • Framed Image: 52″ x 79″ in (132 x 201 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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