It is David Yarrow's 10th anniversary of his passion to the arts that "The Long March" celebrates.
A little over ten years ago, David Yarrow captured emperor penguins, the world's largest penguins, in Antarctica's Snow Hill. The most well-known of these photographs is "The Long March." You'll never forget seeing ten penguins marching in a single line in a black-and-white photograph. At a perfect 90-degree angle, the wide-angle photo was captured.

"Capturing the beauty and intensity of Antarctica in a single still photo is tough," says Yarrow. He traveled to Antarctica, the world's coldest, driest, and most hostile continent, to document the landscape and lives of emperor penguins and other creatures.

Yarrow's image of Antarctic penguins, "The Long March," isn't the only one that stands out. To mark World Penguin Day, he shared a photo of a mother and son penguin walking together. A juvenile penguin chick is seen helping another down an icy white hill in another photo. The "contentment" image of emperor penguin parents clutching their beaks while safeguarding their fluffy babies is also worth mentioning.

In a number of locations around the world, including the dark-and-light scene in Antarctica, David Yarrow has risked harsh weather and risky conditions to record the interior lives of animals. "The most important distinction between art and news is proximity and sensation," Yarrow contends.

Yarrow also considers difficult regions on the other side of the world. On Natural World Safari tours to both polar zones, he shares his knowledge and abilities with guests. A polar bear roaming above the Arctic Circle was depicted in another of his iconic photos, "78 Degrees North." The painting "79 Degrees North" sold for £81,250 (roughly $106,589) at auction in London in 2018.

The many dramatic elements of Antarctica, such as floating ice sheets, tabular icebergs, and vast views that include the Southern lights and lovely seas, make it great for landscape photography. Penguins are the most well-known Antarctic birds, although there are also albatross, whales, and seals to be found there. David Yarrow Photography is happy to address any queries you might have about prints. "His photograph has an aesthetic simplicity about it that none of my previous Snow Hill images could equal," Yarrow remarked of "The Long March." Hundreds of incredible photographs have arisen from David Yarrow's unique approach to animal and environmental photography. In 2019, the book David Yarrow was released, featuring 150 of Yarrow's most striking current pictures, as well as an introduction by NFL legend Tom Brady and an afterword by Cindy Crawford. The 368-page book's earnings will go solely to wildlife conservation groups.
David Yarrow
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David Yarrow

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