Last chance to see Mumbai show about factory life
The Indian-born artist Surabhi Saraf is known for her audio-visual and interactive installations. Her family owns a pharmaceutical factory in Indore, which this exhibition in Mumbai is influenced by. It looks at the repetitive and anonymous world of factory work, with several video booths showing close-ups of the assembly lines and workers at the plant. Wall projections also show performers mimicking the motions of the equipment and the workers during shifts, and the show explores themes of labour and the mechanisation of the body. Remedies runs at the Galerie Mirchandani + Steinruecke in Mumbai until December 10. For more information visit www.galeriems.com.
Technological obsolescence told through art
Images of easily recognisable yet obsolete technology dominate this exhibition of Dublin-born artist Michael Craig-Martin's work. Black-and-white TVs, old laptops, gaming consoles and incandescent lightbulbs all feature. This show in London brings together works from 1981 to the present day and it underlines the increasing transience of technology and the rapid pace of advancement. Particularly striking is how Craig-Martin is inspired by the banal, such as paintings of a hotel handle and its key card slot, along with another of a hotel room safe. Transience runs at the Serpintine Gallery until February 14. For more information visit www.serpentinegalleries.org.
Artistic engagement with the Palestinian cause
This exhibition in London is a major survey of the works of Palestinian artist Emily Jacir. She was born in Bethlehem in 1972 and has explored the enduring themes of migration, resistance and homeland. This show brings together her work in sculpture, film, drawings, installations and photography. Material for a film, her Golden Lion-winning installation at the 2007 Venice Biennale, is a highlight. It is based on the life of Palestinian poet, Wael Zuaiter, who was assassinated by Mossad agents in 1972. Here Jacir reimagines his life through family photography and letters. Emily Jacir: Europa runs at the Whitechapel Gallery until January 3. For more information visit www.whitechapelgallery.org.

