SKIPTON: Craven Museum and Gallery’s latest exhibition celebrates 200 years of the Leeds Liverpool Canal.
It features film, photos, oral history tapes, stories and other items.
The museum — based in Skipton Town Hall — is asking anyone with photographs, objects, stories or memories of the canal to contact them, via museum@cravendc.gov.uk or call 01756 706407.
* Daniel Shiel is exhibiting his latest photographic work, Imagined Urbanscapes, at Mill Bridge Gallery.
The exhibition is "a psycho-geographical adventure into forgotten and overlooked urban landscapes and wastelands".
The exhibition will run until Saturday, July 16.
SETTLE: A new exhibition of work by Settle-based artist Margaret Uttley focuses on peat moorlands and our relationship with this fragile but important environment.
Her drawings and paintings celebrate the hostile but distinctive beauty of the Yorkshire moorland landscape and will be on show at Gavagan Art, in Settle Town Hall, until July 30.
She uses two Grouse-Butts poems by Ted Hughes as a starting point to explore this dramatic landscape and broader issues relating to the environmental function and use of moorlands.
* The Folly is staging two exhibitions.
The End of an Era: 200 Years of Zion Chapel tells the history of one of the town's landmark buildings has been curated by Folly volunteer Heather Maufe.
Zion Chapel was built in 1816 into the steep hillside of Upper Settle and was at the heart of community life in the town for the best part of 200 years. Many current Settle residents will have connections with Zion, not only through services, weddings and funerals but also through the astonishing range of all-age activities that flourished over the years.
The chapel closed last year.
The exhibition will run alongside 1916: Chronicles of Courage, part of the Heritage Lottery-funded Craven and the First World War project.
It tells the stories of local men and women who served their country in many different ways during the First World War and includes graphic reconstructions of life on the battlefield through installations of a section of trench and a regimental first-aid post fitted out with medical and surgical equipment of the period.
It too runs until October 30.
* Silk paintings by local artist Christine Carradice are showcased in an exhibition at the Gallery on the Green.
Her paintings never have people in them as she prefers to show familiar scenes at the quiet time before people arrive and the day’s activities begin.
Christine, who has lived in Settle for 20 years, has also created a range of pictures and cards for the exhibition, which has been extended until Saturday, July 30.
BOLTON ABBEY: The Bolton Abbey Estate is the setting for a new outdoor theatre adaptation of The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame’s enchanting tale of adventure and mischief featuring childhood favourites Ratty, Mole, Badger and Toad.
The production from North Yorkshire-based Gobbledigook Theatre, written especially for Bolton Abbey, will be staged from Saturday, July 23 to Sunday, August 7, and will be set against the backdrop of Priory Church and ruins on the banks of the River Wharfe.
Visitors are encouraged to bring their own folding chairs to enjoy the performance and should be prepared to move around as the performance is delivered.
Tickets must be pre-booked and the entry price includes admission to the Estate for the day. They cost £17.50 for adults, £12 for children and free for those under three. A limited number of family tickets (two adults and two children) are available for £50.
Both evening and matinee performances are available and refreshments will be on sale before the show and during the interval.
To buy tickets and for further information visit boltonabbey.com
CARLETON: Popular country artist Dave Inglis will perform at the Iron Horse Country Music Club on Saturday.
Doors open at Carleton Social Club at 7.15pm with an entrance fee of £5, which is payable on the door.
GRASSINGTON: Grassington Community Cinema will show two films at the village's Octagon Theatre on Saturday.
The first offering, at 4.30pm, is the U-rated Peanuts Movie, featuring state-of-the-art 3D animation.
Then, at 7.30pm, older filmgoers will be treated to a showing of the latest James Bond film, Spectre.
It is the fourth outing for Daniel Craig as 007, and the second film to be directed by Sam Mendes.
Admission is £2.50 for children and £5 for adults, with a loyalty discount scheme available.
* The Grassington Festival exhibition, Migration, will run at the Wishbone Gallery until August 28. It can be viewed from 10.30am to 5pm.
HELLIFIELD: Practices this year's Hellifield's Got Talent Show take place in the social club on Sundays from 4pm.
The theme is Gone But Not Forgotten and the show will be staged on Friday, August 5 - the eve of the village gala.
KILDWICK: The Epiphany Singers will present a concert of choral music from the 16th to the 21st century at St Andrew's Church on Saturday at 7.30pm.
Admission is £7.50 for adults, with under 16s free.
STEETON: The Blue Suede Dudes will play at the Goats Head on Saturday.
The rock ‘n’ roll revivalists will perform a popular set of hits from the 1950s and 1960s.
The trio will also play songs by the likes of Buddy Holly, Everly Brothers and Gerry Lee Lewis.