A taxi, a dog, graffiti, a block of flats and a sign offering fish and chips for £3.

As photographic subjects go, the above don't exactly scream glamour but seen through the lens of 22-year-old Brighton-based photographer Katie Greenwood they are transformed into a celebration of city life.

Her first exhibition, Unreal City, is an array of familiar sights captured on the streets of Brighton, New York and Paris and blasted at you in a range of bright-light colours.

This girl seems to have secured her very own pair of rose-tinted spectacles especially for urban watching.

"Cities are my favourite subject. I see beauty there," says Katie. "Many things catch my eye."

Katie was brought up in the hills surrounding Battle, moving to Brighton in her teens to take a degree in visual culture at Sussex University.

She remains, however, a refreshingly down-to-earth girl. The exhibition title may be taken from TS Eliot's poem The Waste land but that is about as close to arty pretensions she gets.

Questioned about the sense of movement in her photo of a little dog looking at a Brighton taxi, she laughs: "I was drunk that night, which is why it's blurry."

The no-nonsense approach doesn't stop there. Katie has no truck with the modern obsession with digital cameras. Her pictures are unarguably "now" but they are all taken on second-hand equipment given to her by her grandfather when she was 15.

"It would probably only sell for about £100 now," she says.

"I'm going to keep taking pictures and hope people like them."

You get the feeling that's not going to be a problem.

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