SKIPTON: A new work by photographic artist Daniel Shiel has gone on show at the Mill Bridge Gallery.

Skiptonia with Starlings is a photo-collage made from more than 300 images taken in and around the town of Skipton.

Daniel said: “I’m very pleased with the finished piece and hope visitors to the Mill Bridge Gallery will share my pleasure; enjoy identifying the buildings and places hidden in this bizarre landscape.”

Skiptonia with Starlings will run until the end of February.

lA pop-up art exhibition is being staged at High Corn Mill.

Glow Gallery showcases the work of local artists, with originals and prints adorning all the mill walls.

The exhibition will run until the end of January.

lStrid will perform an eclectic mix of classic songs at Skipton Folk Unplugged on Monday.

The club meets at the Narrow Boat pub, on Victoria Street, from 8.30pm.

lThe Singing for Fun group for people living with dementia or Parkinson’s disease will meet at Skipton Baptist Church on Tuesday, January 20 from 2pm to 3.30pm.

No singing experience is needed and for more information contact 01423 813464.

SETTLE: The Three Kings have returned to Settle.

And they are happily ensconced at the town’s Gallery on the Green, housed in a former phone box.

The tableau - first seen in 2011 and created by Settle Flagmakers - has been brought back by popular demand.

It will remain in place until next Saturday, January 17.

For more information, visit galleryonthegreen.org.uk lSettle Voices Community Choir will hold its first meeting of the New Year on Monday.

It will take place in the Friends Meeting House, Kirkgate, from 1pm to 3pm and new members are welcome. For more information, visit settlevoices.org.uk or ring 01729 823777.

lThe Three Peaks for Palestine group will hold a film night at the Friends Meeting House next Thursday, January 15, at 7.30pm.

It will show Budrus - a 2009 Israeli/Palestinian/American documentary film about non-violent demonstrations conducted by the residents of Budrus (a Palestinian town) during the early 2000s to protest against the building of the Israeli West Bank barrier inside the village.

It focuses on the inspirational story of the women’s community group in the town.

BRADLEY: Bradley Film Club will screen the Star Wars movie New Hope at the primary school next Thursday, January 15.

Although it was the first Star Wars movie to be made, it is now regarded as the fourth instalment of George Lucas’s epic sci-fi fantasy series.

EARBY: Earby and District Gardeners will hold a film night in the New Road Community Centre on Tuesday.

Local company Spellbound will show two nature films - Wild about Mull and 80 Degrees North and North Riding - from 7.30pm.

EMBSAY: A new family cinema club is being launched in Embsay.

It will meet for the first time in Embsay Village Hall on Saturday, with doors opening at 3.30pm.

Membership is £3 per person.

GIGGLESWICK: The PG rated film, The Hundred-Foot Journey, will be shown at the Richard Whiteley Theatre next Sunday, January 18.

It is a heart-warming foodie drama starring Helen Mirren, who oversees a Michelin-starred restaurant in the village of Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val in the south of France. But gastronomic war breaks out when the displaced Indian Kadam family decide to open an Indian restaurant just across the road.

The Community Cinema screening will start at 3.30pm and tickets cost £5.

KETTLEWELL: The Oscar-winning film 12 Years a Slave will be screened at the village hall next Saturday, January 17, at 7.30pm.

Tickets cost £5 and are available from Caroline Hatton on 01756 760378 or the Village Stores.