In Stock
1
$465.00
Product Description
“Poppies” (2025) is a standalone image from a collaboration between Yanow and her close friend and floral designer, Annie Concannon. The two often work together, drawn to how their practices complement each other in exploring impermanence and memory. Concannon’s arrangements exist only in the moment, while photography preserves a fleeting instant. Their collaborations remind them that friendship evolves with time, even as memories remain unchanged.
Open edition with limited availability.
Developed & Hand Printed by Nice Film Club.
Signed by the artist and includes a Certificate of Authenticity.
Key Features
Title: Poppies
Artist: Marley Yanow
Year: 2025
Open Edition
Framing (optional): Clear Mable
Face width 1 1/4", crafted in premium American hardwood
Lab Notes
Format: Hand Enlarged C-Print
Printed on: FUJIFILM Crystal Archive Digital Pro Type DPII Glossy
Camera: Mamiya RZ 67
Lens: 90mm
Film: Portra 400
Tonal delicacy is the driving force of this print. The silver halide chemistry manages the subtle interplay between the vibrant greens of the stems and the muted, high-key background. Instead of washing out, the whites retain a soft, atmospheric density. The continuous tone of the analog process captures the complex refraction of light through the glass vase and water to keep the details sharp but natural. The grain structure prevents the negative space from looking flat and gives the image a tactile, paper-like quality.
Due to the hand-made nature of the printing process, minor color variations may occur.
Each order is prepared with the same attention as the work itself, carefully packed by our team to ensure safe arrival.
At Nice we stand behind the quality of all our products.
About
Marley Yanow is a lens-based artist who uses photography to explore human physicality, interpersonal connections, and her relationship with the world around her. In the years following the pandemic and throughout her time in art school, her work has turned toward the many facets and interpretations of “home,” both literal and metaphorical. After a year of isolation and social deprivation during the global lockdown, Yanow realized that home was not tied to a single, fixed place. The loss of belonging within the larger world made photography an anchor—her way of reintroducing herself to the people and places that offered a sense of home beyond her own walls. Her practice reflects this search: photographing friendships, romances, familial relationships, landscapes, objects, and at times, herself. Through these images, Yanow traces the shifting boundaries of belonging, finding meaning in the moments and connections that shape the feeling of home.
“Photography gives me the power to collaborate, to go beyond myself, and to have a conversation with who or what I’m capturing.”
— Marley Yanow







Stay up to date on all the Nice organized
content, features and local events.
© 2026 Meru Labs LLC