ALICE is heading home from Wonderland at the end of the month after several months in Cliffe Castle.

But the Keighley museum still has plenty more happening throughout the autumn to keep visitors occupied.

The Alice's Adventures in Wonderland exhibition will continue until October 30 allowing children to join the adventurous girl on her journey around the Bradford Council-owned building.

Things will become curiouser and curiouser as families follow the white rabbit and see intriguing items from the council’s collections.

To finish the season there will be a screening of Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland movie on October 30 at 6pm.

The event is free, but booking is essential by calling 01535 618231. Audience members are invited to dress up.

The museum’s other temporary exhibition, The Real Wuthering Heights: The Story Of The Withins Farms, based on a local history book, will continue until November 6.

The Music at the Museum season continues with a performance from Voicemail Harmony on November 6 at 2pm.

The free presentation will feature acoustic and a capella songs, from performers who leave messages around the world through a blend of musical styles, including folk, blues, pop, protest and traditional.

Windstruments Flute Orchestra will perform on December 4 at 2pm, their programme including music written for the stage along with well-known and unusual Christmas music. No booking is needed for either concert.

Cliffe Castle hosts its new exhibition, Inkers, from November 12 to January 29, featuring the work of a group formed in 2002 to explore printmaking in all its diversity and to create regular exhibitions.

A museum spokesman said: “For this exhibition members have expanded beyond the bounds of printmaking to respond in any medium they felt appropriate.

“The concept lies in the way they as visitors have responded to the many objects displayed at Cliffe Castle, the building and its setting.”

Isobel Cortese will present her Beastly Imaginarium in an exhibition running from December 6 to March 5.

The artist has created a collection of works exploring our relationship with animals, with miniature worlds containing creatures that have taken on human characteristics and become the dominant species.

The spokesman said: “This results in a bizarre amalgamation of human and beast, in scenarios that are oddly familiar, yet the warped reality plays with our perception of the world and our place in it.”

Visit bradfordmuseums.org or call 01535 618231 for further information.