India An early Punjab Exhibition hall photograph 1864. The Punjab Exhibition marked the transition from Mughal to British Lahore. It was meant to begin the process of reconciliation in the Punjab after the war of 1857. Manufactured goods and handicrafts from all over the province and the rest of India were put on display. Over 1,000 people per day came to the building during the first months of the exhibition. Originally intended as a temporary structure, the building remained in use, housing the Lahore Museum until 1890. In the 1870s 1880s the museum's curator was J. Lockwood Kipling, Rudyard Kipling's father. Inscribed in English in black ink – Punjab Exhibition 1864 – some what faded but an important early photograph of the Punjab. Provenance – from an album of a British traveller who visited the Punjab exhibition in 1864. Measures approx 9.3 cm x 7.5cm