Nick Turpin (born 1969) is a British street photographer[1][2] and advertising and design photographer. He is based in London and near Lyon, France.[1]
Turpin established the first international collective of street photographers,[3][4] In-Public, in 2000[5][6][7][8] and was a member until 2018. His work has been published in his own book, On The Night Bus (2016) and in various survey publications, as well as being included in a number of group exhibitions. He publishes through Nick Turpin Publishing, makes short films, and gives workshops on street photography[9][10][11]
Phil Coomes, writing for BBC News in 2009, considered Turpin "one of the best" street photographers.[1]
Turpin was born and raised in London in 1969.[12] He studied an art and design foundation course at the University of Gloucestershire, specialising in photography; then a BA in photography, film and video at the University of Westminster.[12] Whilst at university he showed his second year photojournalism stories to the picture editor at The Independent and in 1990, aged 20, quit his course to be a press photographer for the newspaper.[13] He left The Independent in 1997 for a career in advertising and design photography[1][14][15] that would finance his street photography[1] (for example he photographed the cover of Bridget Jones's Diary (1995) by Helen Fielding).[14]
Turpin established the first international collective of street photographers,[4] In-Public, in 2000[5][6][7][3] with the intention of bringing together like minded photographers to hold exhibitions, produce books and conduct workshops.[15] Colin Westerbeck, writing in Time in 2011, said Turpin was "notable for having been instrumental in a collaborative documentary project", namely In-Public.[3] He left the collective in 2018.[16][17]
In 2010 he established Nick Turpin Publishing which published the book 10 – 10 Years of In-Public (2010).
He makes short films. In-Sight (2011), was commissioned for and premièred at Format International Photography Festival in Derby in 2011.[18]
In August 2017, in collaboration with Hoxton Mini Press and Jason Reed, Turpin organised Street London, a street photography symposium.[19] He has also given talks about[20] and workshops on street photography.[9][10]
Turpin's work is held in the following collection: