A wryly amusing exhibition in which the artists display an ambivalent attitude towards the history of film. Luchino Visconti's classic movie Death in Venice is remade by Ming Wong – pictured above in Ming Wong, Life and Death in Venice, 2009 – with the two leading roles played by the artist himself. At Cornerhouse gallery, to 9 Jan Photograph: PR
Swiss artist Urs Fischer's latest exhibition, titled Douglas Sirk, features a series of mirrored boxes, their surfaces silkscreened with pictures of fruit, toys and furniture.
At Sadie Coles HQ, 6 Oct to 11 Dec Photograph: Stefan Altenburger
Tatiana Trouvé creates interiors that reflect the interior world of the mind, built from the Paris-based artist's memories. Pictured above: Sans Titre, from the series Intranquillity (2010). At South London Gallery, to 28 Nov
Photograph: F Gousset
This exhibition offers a small but representative range of Richter's highly sophisticated oeuvre, in which he makes paintings that evoke ghost images of photographs. Pictured above: Self Portrait Standing, Three Times (1991).
At New Walk Art Gallery, to 27 Feb Photograph: PR
Ronja Svaneborg encases obsolete lightbulbs in black leather jackets, while Kyouei Design tune a TV into an abstract amazement of otherworldly colour-fields, in this exploration of the 'leisure society'. Works on display include Laila Maia Baria (untitled), pictured above. At Northern Gallery For Contemporary Art, to 30 Oct Photograph: PR
A contemporary take on the privileges enjoyed and predicaments suffered by 21st-century city dwellers. An enchanted perspective on the modern city landscape is provided by Grazia Toderi's two-screen video projection of a nocturnal panorama – Orbite Rosse, (2009), pictured above. At The New Art Gallery Walsall, to 23 Dec Photograph: PR
The four artists nominated for this year's Turner prize are: Angela de la Cruz, Susan Philipsz, The Otolith Group and Dexter Dalwood, whose work includes Hendrix's Last Basement (2001), pictured above. At Tate Britain, 5 Oct to 3 Jan
Photograph: FXP Photography
German artist Manfred Pernice's first UK solo show sees him developing his interest in domestic settings. Creating a show within a show, works are housed in a sculpture that doubles as a series of rooms. Works on display include Sonderausstellung: Wishy-washy (2009), pictured above. At Modern Art Oxford, to 21 Nov Photograph: PR