Eric’s Note: Chris Porsz is a street photographer based in Peterborough and has recently published a book on his photos from the 1980’s titled: “New England.” In this interview below, I talk to him about how he got started in street photography, how he embarked on his project, and how he eventually put it together as a book. Definitely an in-depth interview you don’t want to miss! Â
Chris: We share a birthday Eric but I go way back to the early hours of January 31, 1953, safe within the walls of Peterborough’s maternity unit while the worst floods of the 20th century visited our shores; ships went down and more than 300 people drowned.
Just eight years earlier, my mother, Krystyna, had teetered on the brink of death in a Nazi concentration camp. She and her two sisters, Eda and Regina, used to be called ‘the three beauties’. They led happy lives in Warsaw but the family was torn asunder by war. My mother’s father died in the sewers, her mother Sarah, Regina and her five-year-old daughter Lilliana were murdered in Majdanek concentration camp, Lublin. Eda was sent to Siberia by the Russians and that is where my cousin Vicki was born.

