Career
From 1981 to 1984, he worked for diverse publications including The Face and NME. Pyke has been a staff photographer at The New Yorker since 2004. Born in Leicester, Pyke left school at 16 to work in the local textile industry as a factory mechanic. He became involved in the turbulent music scene of the late 1970s, a move which led him into his first experiments in photography.
Pyke moved to London in 1978.
He became a singer in a number of bands and was involved with establishing a record label and fanzines. During an extended motorcycle tour of the United States of America in 1976, he assembled a collection of Instamatic pictures.
On his return he Xeroxed and coloured them and, fascinated by the results, purchased a Rolleiflex camera. By 1980 he had abandoned rock music for the visual arts
Pyke"s early work was sold to magazines and the music press, and exhibited from 1982.
lieutenant helped to define the emergent visual signature of the iconic 1980s magazine, The Face. His first cover subject was John Lydon, and Pyke"s predilection for distinctive, graphically adventurous portraiture was immediately evident. He sought to develop his style by joining the Film Centre Stream course at the London College of Printing in 1982, though he was an unconventional student, working as much on his own projects as college assignments.
More recently his work featured prominently in Mike Nichols" movie Closer.
lieutenant was during an early project on film directors that Pyke established his trademark portrait style, chancing on the little close-up lenses, that when placed on his Rolleiflex camera, allowed him to make incisive, direct images within the square 6x6cm negative. The first picture made in this way, of the film director Sam Fuller in 1983, was taken the same afternoon as Pyke found the Rolleinars in an Edinburgh camera shop.
Throughout his career Pyke has developed, funded and then published a number of personal projects which have given his work shape and thrust. Best known perhaps are those on the world"s leading thinkers "Philosophers" and on youth identity as expressed through "Uniforms".
In the late nineties he completed the series, "Astronauts", photographing the men that had walked on the moon as well as related still life artefacts from the Apollo Missions.
Pyke has been collecting the Faces of Our Times for almost thirty years, recording those who have made a contribution to the history of the age. He has made a series on First World War veterans and The Holocaust Survivors as well as a major study of the world"s leading film directors. He has produced still-life projects that include his "Soles" series and the "Post Partum Post Mortem" collection.
There is also powerful landscape work, exciting experiments in collage and multiple imagery, and a profound body of humanist street photography.
Pyke has worked for many of the world"s leading magazines, and published eight books which concentrate on different aspects of his work. His work has been exhibited widely in the United Kingdom, Europe, Japan, Mexico and the United States of America and is held in many permanent collections, including the National Portrait Gallery, the Imperial War Museum, the V&A in London, and the New York Public Library.
Pyke was appointed an Administration Member of the Order of the British Empire in the 2004 New Year Honours list for his services to the Arts. In 2006 he was made an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society.
He became staff photographer at The New Yorker in 2004 and lives in New York City.
Pyke married photographer Nic Kaczorowski at Saint Paul"s Cathedral, London, in June 2014.