That is one beautiful bow Zak!
I think I would go elaborate with this. It would be some trouble but a bow like this deserves deluxe treatment!
I was thinking the same thing as Dave, sorta. I would suspend the bow. Once suspended I would secure the bow itself at a slightly upward angle and to something that was secure enough for the next stage.
The next stage being to draw the bow string and secure that such that the bow is now posed in a drawn position.
I would go with a black background. I would shoot at a slightly lower-than-level camera angle for a "Hero" look! At this point I would build the lighting set-up getting what I think would look good emphasized and I would shoot it. I'd probably start with three lights. A rim light for good separation from the BG, and two additional wearing strip boxes in a vertical position. A good starting point would be at 45* angles on either side of the camera, adjust position and power as needed, and making sure all the parts of the bow are nicely lit and nothing is too deep in shadow.
Then, I would take an arrow, armed with a hunting arrowhead and sporting perfect fletching, light and shoot it separately suspended against a black BG at approx. the same angle as the bow. Making sure the notch is the same angle as needed to fit the bowstring.
I would then take both shots into post and composite them together such that the arrow is now notched in the drawn bow string and on the arrow rest ready to loose.
I would then let everyone wonder how I did it!