ARTISTS from Keighley and Haworth dominate the Big Screen in Bradford’s City Park this month.

Their work is being screened throughout August as the latest exhibition in the ongoing Not Just Hockney project.

The project, set up by Silsden arts enthusiast Colin Neville to accompany his website notjusthockney.info, promotes artists from across Bradford district.

This month the five artists include Keighley-based painter Terry Greene, Haworth artist and teacher Jane Sedgwick and Keighley-born mixed media and collage artist Heather Cook.

The others are Heather’s husband David, who like her is based in the Yorkshire Dales, and John Myers, an award-winning social documentary photographer from Bradford.

Images of their work is being shown on the big screen every day in August at 12.30pm. The exhibition is supported by Bradford City of Film.

Mr Neville said: “The Not Just Hockney website is in its second year and there are now around 300 artists, past and present, with Bradford district connections, profiled on it – including, of course, David Hockney.

“The numbers of visitors to the site has been steadily increasing over this period, with around 12,000 hits a month. I keep finding more visual artists to add to the site too, and that’s due to a great creative buzz and energy around district that encourages creative people to settle and work here.

“The evidence of that is on the Big Screen in City Park every month. This month is no exception, with the husband and wife art duo, of David and Heather Cook, both with a distinguished history of exhibiting work locally and nationally between them – David has even designed book covers for the author, Bill Bryson.

“Terry Greene and Jane Sedgwick, both from the Haworth area, have each built a strong following for their respective and very original approaches to art."

David Wilson, director of Bradford UNESCO City of Film said: “August is a prime time to have pictures on the screen as City Park is buzzing with people.

“We’re delighted to be screening amongst the artists David Cook’s striking landscapes, photographer John Myers’ photographs documenting local people and their lives and Jane Sedgwick’s mixed media work inspired by nature.”

Terry Greene explores the duality of paint: its structure, and its agency.

His work can be found in private art collections in the UK and overseas, and has been shown at galleries across the UK, including in London, Manchester and Castleford.

Jane Sedgwick uses a range of art media, including acrylic, ink, pastel and clay, and her artwork is often inspired by all forms of nature.

She has been a regular contributor and co-ordinator of the Haworth Festival Art Trail and her work has been exhibited at the Menier Gallery in London, Huddersfield Art Gallery, and at East Street Arts in Keighley.

Heather Cook studied art at Bradford College and the Royal College of Art, and was awarded a Shand Kydd Travel Scholarship and in 2011 a printmaking residency at the Finnish Print Centre, Jyvaskyla. Her collage works range from compositional studies to small atmospheric seascapes. Heather’s work has been exhibited widely across the north of England.

Heather’s husband David Cook is a Bingley-born painter and teacher whose work covers landscape and remembered locations.

He approaches his work in diverse ways, which allows for invention and development of ideas in an experimental manner. His work has been exhibited across the UK and overseas.

David has also designed book covers for Bill Bryson books, including Notes from a Small Island, and A Walk in the Woods.

John Myers, a Bradford-born photographer. His award-winning work has, over many years, documented the lives of British people, their homes, and the urban spaces around them.

His work has been shown widely across the UK and overseas in both solo and group exhibitions, including at the Hayward Gallery and Serpentine Gallery in London. It is also in the permanent collections of the Arts Council and the V&A in London.