Delaney's Journal: Stories from the Wild

Step behind the lens and into the narrative of each photograph.

Discover the rare moments, raw emotion, and artistic vision that define these timeless black and white artworks.

Ubuntu — The Tuskless Matriarchs of Addo

In Addo's southernmost reaches, nearly 95% of female elephants carry no tusks — a legacy shaped by poaching, survival, and generations of quiet adaptation. This is their story, and the story behind Ubuntu.

https://www.peterdelaneyphotography.com/black-and-white-elephant-prints

Ubuntu

Where Strength, Trust, and Family Unite

 

 

There are places in Africa that stop you differently. Addo is one of them.

I had been photographing elephants for twenty years before I first visited Addo Elephant National Park in the Eastern Cape. I thought I knew elephants. I thought I understood their presence, their language, their weight in a frame. Then I met the tuskless matriarchs — and I had to learn all over again.

 

 
Trio of tuskless female elephants with tusked bull in Addo Elephant National Park, black and white fine art print by Peter Delaney

Silent Strength

The Southernmost Giants of Africa

 

 

In most African elephant populations, around 2% of females are naturally tuskless. In Addo, that figure is closer to 95%. The reason is one of wildlife conservation's most sobering stories — decades of intense ivory poaching in the early twentieth century killed almost every tusked elephant in the region. What survived was what the hunters didn't want. Over generations, tuskless females thrived, reproduced, and became the norm.

Interestingly, Addo's male elephants still develop tusks. It is only the females who carry this remarkable adaptation — a quiet but profound reminder of what this population endured, and what it chose, generation by generation, to leave behind.

Nature adapted. As it always does.

 

 

In Addo's ancient fynbos, the tuskless matriarchs move on their own terms — pausing to feed from the spekboom, unbothered, unhurried. This is their world. We are just fortunate enough to witness it.

 

 

What struck me most was not their physical difference but their presence. Without tusks, there is nothing to distract from their eyes, their skin, the extraordinary texture of a life lived close to the earth. When the central female in this image turned and held my gaze, I felt seen in a way that rarely happens in twenty years behind a lens.

I titled this print Ubuntu — the ancient Zulu and Xhosa philosophy that reminds us: I am because we are. It felt like the only honest title. These elephants exist today because of each other — because of the bonds that held their families together through generations of pressure and loss.

That is Ubuntu. Not just a philosophy. A survival strategy.

 

 
Young bull elephant leading siblings across spekboom hills in Addo, black and white wildlife photography by Peter Delaney

Last Days

A Young Bull's Final Day in Addo

 

Bring Ubuntu Home

Some art decorates a room. This one changes it.

Ubuntu is available as a fine-art archival print up to 84 inches, face-mounted acrylic, and canvas — all ready to hang straight from the box. Custom framing is available, and every print ships free worldwide.

 
 

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Curator's Choice: A Collection of Silence and Soul

A journey into the soul of Africa. Explore seven award-winning black and white fine art prints, curated by Peter Delaney for their quiet authority and powerful stories.

In a world saturated with noise, these artworks stand apart. Each has been selected not merely for its visual impact, but for its ability to command a room with quiet authority. These are the pieces that collectors return to—images that don’t just hang on the wall, but breathe within a space, offering a permanent pause and a connection to the untamed. This is more than a collection; it is a journey into the soul of Africa, rendered in the timeless language of black and white.

 

Elephant Ridge | Grey Ghosts of Etosha

“Etched in grey and grain — a fleeting glimpse of Africa’s quiet giants.”

 

The Journey Behind the Capture

The quest to capture this image was filled with anticipation and determination. For days, I traversed the vast Namibian landscape in search of this particular herd of over thirty elephants. Just as hope began to fade, I spotted the herd on the final day of my self-drive photographic safari. Positioning myself at a nearby waterhole on a small plateau, I set up my camera as the elephants began to move towards me.

With the dust and sand creating an ethereal atmosphere, I aligned my vehicle parallel to the ridge and captured the moment as the elephants moved gracefully along the ridge’s spine. This fleeting scene, immortalised in "Elephant Ridge," represents the beauty and transience of nature.

 
A panoramic black and white fine art print titled 'Ubuntu' showing a herd of predominantly tuskless elephants walking together in Addo Elephant National Park.

Ubuntu – Elephant Family

Where Strength, Trust, and Family Unite

 

At my favourite watering hole in Addo, I positioned myself not at the water, but on the path I knew they would take. I waited for the herd to walk towards me, their forms set against a landscape of short grass and soft, fluffy clouds.

This panoramic black-and-white print captures a tender moment within a unique elephant family. Nearly all the females here are tuskless, a profound legacy of survival shaped by past poaching. Their adaptation is a testament to resilience.

I titled this piece "Ubuntu," an ancient African philosophy meaning “I am because we are.” In the way the herd surrounds and protects its young, you see this philosophy lived—a universal story of community, compassion, and unbreakable bonds, set against a uniquely South African landscape.

 

Eye to Eye

A Stare That Commands the Wild

 

He was a dark shape, sleeping soundly in the rain. We cut our engine and waited. The silence was broken only by a distant roar.

Stirred by the call, he awoke. He rose from the soaked savanna, his wet mane clinging to a frame of pure power. Then, he fixed us with a primal, one-eyed gaze. In that moment, he was not a subject. He was a sovereign presence, and the silent, electric communication that passed between us demanded nothing less than reverence.

This fine art print immortalises that electric hush. It pulls you into the thunder of his presence, capturing the raw power and untamed beauty of a legendary coalition lion in his prime.

 

Camelopard

A Quiet Majesty — The Soul of Solitude

 

In the quiet aftermath of a storm, the northern plains of the Mara lay drenched in green. From the stillness emerged a single bull giraffe, the last of five, lingering behind as the others moved on.

He stood beneath a solitary acacia, his form poised in perfect harmony with the land. His long neck arched as he leaned delicately to reach the last of the tree’s tender leaves. Above him, remnants of the storm floated in trailing white puffs.

There were no other animals, no distractions. Just him, the tree, and the breath of the earth. I didn’t make this photograph for the sake of composition alone—it was something deeper. In that instant, I felt the world fall away. Everything stilled.

Rendered in black and white, the image strips the scene to its bones—form, light, and feeling. No colour, no noise. Just the gentle power of presence. Camelopard is more than a portrait. It’s a meditation—a timeless echo of solitude, grace, and breath.

 
A minimalist black and white fine art print of two white rhinos, their horns crossed in an 'X', grazing in sync on the plains of Ol Pejeta Conservancy.

White Rhinos | Mirrored Souls

Harmony at the Edge of Extinction

 

On the vast plains of Ol Pejeta, the assignment was clear: to find a perspective lower than the rhinos, to isolate their monumental forms against the sky. With a client by my side, we watched and waited as these two gentle giants grazed, relaxed and untroubled by our presence.

Then, the moment of perfect synchronicity arrived. Their heads lowered in unison, their horns crossing to form a silent "X" at the heart of the frame. In that split second, their individual forms became one mirrored soul. This image is the result of that patience—a minimalist tribute to the profound bonds that endure in the wild and a starkly beautiful reminder of all that we stand to lose.

 
Award-winning black and white fine art print of a chimpanzee, 'Chimpanzee Dreaming', lying pensively on the rainforest floor in Kibale National Park.

Chimpanzee Dreaming

A Silent Yearning in the Forest

 

I was deep in the rainforests of Kibale, the air thick with humidity and the sounds of life, when the hunt began. A cacophony of screams, a blur of shapes—and then, an eerie silence. Separated from my group, a primal fear crept in. That's when I saw him: Totti, a powerful alpha male.

His focus wasn't on me, but on a female high in the canopy. I watched as he tried everything—calls, postures, overtures—to coax her down. She spurned every advance. Then, in a moment of pure, unexpected emotion, he gave up. He lay back on the forest floor, threw his arms behind his head, and let out a forlorn gaze towards his would-be lover.

In that fleeting moment, desire and disappointment became one. My years of experience took over; a slow exhale, a soft press of the shutter. This image, "Chimpanzee Dreaming," immortalises that raw, universal story of longing. It is a testament to the deep emotional lives of our closest relatives and the moments of quiet drama that define the wild. It later earned one of photography's highest honours: Winner, Animal Portraits, Wildlife Photographer of the Year.

 
Black and white fine art print 'Bonds of Love' showing a herd of elephants closely surrounding and protecting a newborn calf with their trunks

Bonds of Love

An Enduring Testament to Family and Devotion

 

A bull’s aggressive advance. A newborn’s terrified shriek. In an instant, the herd moved as one. They closed ranks, a living wall of protection, enveloping the vulnerable calf in a shield of bodies and reassuring trunks.

What makes this moment eternally sacred to me is that my own wife and our baby were beside me in the vehicle. The scene was so raw, so upsetting, that they asked to leave. As I turned the car around, a glance in my rearview mirror revealed the unfolding miracle—the family’s profound, instinctual act of love.

I had just one chance. One frame to capture the essence of their bond. This is that photograph. It is a testament to the fierce, universal language of family—a language of protection, reassurance, and love that knows no bounds between species.

 
Limited edition black and white fine art print of a young female leopard walking along a branch in Lake Nakuru's fever tree forest.

Fever Tree Leopard

A Portrait of Quiet Majesty

 

It began with the slightest movement in Lake Nakuru’s fever tree forest. A young female leopard, a whisper of spotted gold, yawned on a branch and then vanished into the grass.

Guided by instinct, I repositioned myself beside a towering tree with a gracefully broken limb. I waited, trusting she would return to this natural pathway. And then, she emerged.

She paused, her tail flicking in the dappled light, a perfect subject against the forest's yellow bark. In that silent moment of anticipation, as she turned her head, the connection was made. This image is the result of that trust—a quiet portrait of wild grace before she settled on the branch and drifted into a peaceful sleep.

 

Explore the full collection to discover more artworks that speak to the soul.

 
 
 
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How Black & White Photography Reveals the Soul of African Wildlife

Award-winning photographer Peter Delaney explores the emotional power of monochrome. Discover the stories behind the lens and learn how stripping away color reveals the raw texture, emotion, and timeless soul of Africa's majestic wildlife.

A male and female lion resting under a stormy sky in the Masai Mara, black and white fine art photography.

Weathering the Tempest Fine Art Print

 

Seeing in Monochrome

It was on a solitary lunch break, escaping the relentless hum of London's financial district, that I first truly understood the power of monochrome. In the quiet, dusty confines of a second-hand bookshop, I stumbled upon a copy of Don McCullin's “Retrospective”.

As I turned the pages, his portraits of raw, human truth—not of war, but of soul—seared themselves into my mind. In that city of numbers and noise, his images were a silent, devastating shock.

They spoke in a language deeper than colour, a dialect of light, shadow, and gut-wrenching emotion.\

In that moment, a seed was planted. From that day forward, I didn't just see in black and white; I began to feel the world through its stark, honest contrast.

 
 
Lions in the storm, a wide-angle black and white panoramic print of the African savannah.

Weathering the Tempest

"Bring a touch of the wild into your space.

A Lesson in Seeing: Weathering the Tempest

This philosophy was put to the test with “Lions - Weathering the Tempest.”

We happened upon this lion and lioness in the heart of the Masai Mara, and my body went into overdrive. The heart-pounding euphoria told me this was a moment to translate into art.

But raw emotion is not enough. I calmed myself to see the scene not as it was, but as it could be. The lions would play the lead roles, but the supporting cast—the savannah, the brooding storm clouds, the lone tree—would make or break the story. I chose a wider lens to include it all, to give a profound sense of place and scale.

The lion looks out of the frame, asking a silent question. The lioness meets the viewer’s gaze directly, a moment of intimate connection amidst the vastness. The tempest in the sky mirrors the quiet drama on the ground.

But capturing the image is only half the story. The real magic happens in the digital darkroom, where I once more follow my heart. Converting this scene to black and white was an act of translation. Without colour to lead the eye, I used a full tonal range of light and shadow to walk the viewer through the photograph. I sculpted the light on the lions' fur, gave weight to the clouds, and used the tree to anchor the composition, ensuring every element plays its vital role in creating an engaging, timeless art print. It is a perfect example of seeing the monochrome potential before the shutter is released.

 
 
Close-up black and white portrait of a thoughtful chimpanzee with its hands behind its head.

Contemplation Winner Animal Portraits Wildlife Photographer of The Year

Intimacy and Contemplation

This process of reduction reveals profound intimacy. In “Chimpanzee Dreaming,” colour would distract from the quiet poetry etched in the alpha male's skin. Black and white invites you to see the intelligence and vulnerability in his soulful eyes, the story told in every wrinkle and worn nail on his hands.

 
 
Intense close-up portrait of a black-maned Kalahari lion making eye contact, monochrome fine art print.

Heart of Darkness | Confronting the Wild

It also creates a powerful confrontation. In “Heart of Darkness,” the Kalahari lion’s gaze is stripped bare of its golden hue. Rendered in monochrome, every shadow in his mane deepens the sense of power and mystery. His eyes become portals into a wild, unfiltered consciousness. This is not a portrait; it is a moment where you don’t just see the lion—the lion sees you.

 
 
Extreme close-up detail of an African elephant's foot and wrinkled skin, black and white texture photography.

Bigfoot | Winner Nature In Black and White Wildlife Photographer of the Year

The Details That Define Us

And it celebrates the defining details. “Big Foot” focuses on the raw texture and immense weight of an elephant’s foot. In black and white, every wrinkle and crevice becomes a word in a story of strength and endurance, a monument to the unseen details that define a life in the wild.

 
 

Own a Piece of the Soul

Each of my prints is handcrafted to museum-grade standards, using archival papers like Hahnemühle Photo Rag®. This ensures that every glance, every breath of the wild is preserved with depth, clarity, and permanence. There is no digital manipulation to 'enhance' nature—just tonal truth and tactile honesty.

These are not merely photographs. They are soul portraits.

For the collector, this means owning more than an image; it is an experience. These limited edition pieces are available in custom sizes and finishes—from elegantly floated frames to archival loose prints for bespoke framing. Each one is signed, numbered, and accompanied by its own Certificate of Authenticity.

Collectors often tell me these prints don’t just decorate their walls—they anchor them. They evoke silence, presence, and a profound connection to the natural world. A lion’s stare can make a boardroom pause. A chimpanzee in thought can turn a hallway into a conversation. They become future heirlooms, carrying the spirit of the wild into a home.

I believe anyone can operate a camera. But it is vision—forged in experience and feeling—that separates a photographer from an artist. It is the vision to see the story in the shadows and to translate the soul of your subject into a form that can, in turn, speak directly to the soul of the viewer.

If one of these images resonates with you, it is not a coincidence. It is recognition.

 
 
lt Text: A large 180x120cm black and white cheetah print titled Sons of Rosetta in a sleek black frame, displayed above a modern sofa in a contemporary living room.

Make a Powerful Statement

*“Sons of Rosetta” commands attention in a contemporary setting. This 180x120cm museum-grade print transforms a space, merging the untamed spirit of the wild with modern elegance.*

 
 
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