David Yarrow
Riders (Color)
Archival Pigment Print
Large (framed): 71x82
Standard (framed): 52x59
Ed of 12
Standard (framed): 52x59
Ed of 12
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...
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.
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.