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There's never a dull moment in Richmond...

There’s always something to do and somewhere to go in Richmond. With the unique Georgian Theatre Royal plus the award-winning independent cinema at The Station, drama and cinema are well taken care of, and then there’s the sparkling events programme at the Green Howards Museum, as well as Richmond Castle and the Richmondshire Museum.

And coming up is Richmond MayFest - the town's annual celebration of spring with loads of music, dance and family fun going on all over the town. This year it is all happening on May 2nd-May 4th, with the May Fair at Richmond Castle, concerts, ceilidh, Folk Fest, Baroque Fest, Day of Dance and much much more. Find out the whole programme and book your tickets here.

23 Tuesday 23 Jun, 2026 - Tuesday 23 Jun, 2026 Tuesday

10:00 am

23rd June Light and Dark Full Day Art Workshop with Kane Cunningham

will explore the qualities of chalk pastels and the technique of chiaroscuro.

News Editor

News-Events, Art, Talks & Workshops, June

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This one day course with Kane Cunningham will explore the qualities of chalk pastels and the technique of chiaroscuro. The morning session will experiment with the drawing techniques on black sugar paper. A still life constructed from artefacts offered from the extensive Green Howards museum collection will be the basis of study.

 

The afternoon session will develop these studies into an abstract painting using either watercolour or acrylic paint.

Chiaroscuro is an Italian artistic technique, translating to "light-dark," that uses intense, dramatic contrasts between light and shadow to create three-dimensional volume, depth, and mood in drawings and paintings.

Equipment needed and not included in the price: chalk pastels, rubbers, black sugar paper, paint, easel if you have one and painting paper, canvas or painting boards.

Refreshments throughout the day and a buffet lunch are included in the price.

Bio of Kane Cunningham:

Kane Cunningham born in Manchester in 1961 first shot to worldwide fame in 2009 when he bought a house on the edge of a cliff in Scarborough for £3000 to create a work of art. It was a bungalow destined to fall into the sea due to erosion. The council enforced a demolition order in 2013 due to concerns over danger to the public, it cost another £3000 to knock it down.

An art lecturer for 35 years he retired in 2017 to paint full time. He exhibits his work in galleries nationally and travels extensively across the UK painting and living in a VW camper van. 

He is also the co-director of an environmental and arts festival called Big Ideas By The Sea in Scarborough.

Presently he is working on a new project that follows the River Wharfe starting at Langstrothdale. Kane said, ‘Wharfedale offers some spectacular scenery to paint which inspired J.M.W. Turner between 1808 and 1824. It is a landscape unchanged over 200 years and  so a view Turner would be familiar with today.’

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