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14 December 2024
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David Yarrow
The Girl on the Train (Montana, USA)
, 2020
56 x 86 in. (142.2 x 218.4 cm.)
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David Yarrow
British, born 1966
The Girl on the Train (Montana, USA)
,
2020
David Yarrow
The Girl on the Train (Montana, USA)
, 2020
56 x 86 in. (142.2 x 218.4 cm.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Photographs, Archival Pigment Print
Size
56 x 86 in. (142.2 x 218.4 cm.)
Price
Price on Request
Contact Gallery About This Work
Hilton Contemporary
Chicago
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About this Artwork
Edition
Edition of 20
Size Notes
Large
Image size: 56” x 86”
Framed with a 3" mat: 67” x 97”
Framed with a 5" mat: 71” x 101”
Standard
Image size: 37” x 57”
Framed with a 3" mat: 48” x 68”
Framed with a 5" mat: 52” x 72”
Movement
Art of the 21st Century, Contemporary Art
Exhibitions
11/22/2019–06/30/2021 David Yarrow: On the Road
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Description
“This old railway carriage, was built in Mon- tana in 1902 and operated until 1968. It now lies
abandoned in the ghost town of Nevada City and serves as a reminder of the busier days in the
mountains. At today’s value, when mining came to an end in 1922, some $2.5bn of gold had
been extracted from the region. The state of Montana played an integral part in Gold Rush
history. I first visited the train in 2015 and immediately saw its potential for a staged shot. Half
the window areas are open to the elements and in the winter the snow often overwhelms the
decaying interior. In the following years we took a few pictures but, in many ways, these were a
dress rehearsal for November 2020. We knew our light and our angles. Taking the female icon Cara Delevingne to a unique site like this, so far from anywhere vaguely on the map, was an
opportunity not to be wasted. This is not a job for the precious, the carriage is fragile and getting
on board was not easy. But Cara, as I know from working with her previously, is not precious, she
is game for anything that is creative and authentic. The camera loves her and the styling - in an
old buffalo skin coat - deliberately plays to a timeless story. She pings out of the train. Sometimes
an artist creates something that can’t be copied and I think this is one such work. We would like
to thank the Nevada City Outdoor Historic Museum for collaborating on this project.” – David
Yarrow
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