Mumbai Museum Turns Family Albums Into Public History in Pathare Prabhu Exhibition
CSMVS Mumbai has opened an exhibition drawing on private family archives to document the Pathare Prabhu community's four-century presence in the city, raising questions about who controls the narratives of urban heritage.

For most of four hundred years, the Pathare Prabhu community kept its history in shoeboxes, almirahs, and the memories of elders. On 18 May 2026, the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya in South Mumbai opened an exhibition intended to move that history from private drawers onto public gallery walls.
The show, titled to reflect the community's own sense of its trajectory, draws on photographs, legal documents, ritual objects, and oral histories contributed directly by Pathare Prabhu families. According to The Indian Express, curators worked with community members over an extended period to select materials that would represent both the domestic and the civic dimensions of a community that traces its settlement in the city to the early seventeenth century. The exhibition is housed in the museum's community gallery space, a designation that signals the institution's intent to position itself as a venue for collaborative heritage work rather than a one-directional depositary.
The approach marks a departure from the traditional model of museum acquisition, in which institutions collect objects and communities appear primarily as subjects of historical documentation rather than active participants in its production. At CSMVS, the shift reflects a broader reconsideration of what public cultural institutions owe to the communities whose histories they hold in trust.
Pathare Prabhu identity has never been static. The community, which describes itself as one of the oldest established Hindu settlements in the islands that became Bombay, has navigated Portuguese colonial rule, British annexation, Maratha administrative systems, and the transformatory decades of Indian independence and urbanisation. For most of that period, the preservation of genealogical records, community rituals, and property registers was the responsibility of hereditary keepers — a system that maintained accuracy but limited access.
The exhibition does not pretend that the tensions inherent in bringing private archives into public view have been resolved. Several families approached the museum with conditions about which objects could be photographed and how their ancestors might be identified in display text. The curatorial team, working with community advisors, negotiated those conditions on a case-by-case basis. The result is an exhibition that acknowledges its own incompleteness: there are gaps in the record, materials that families declined to lend, and photographs whose subjects remain unidentified. The Indian Express notes that this honesty about what was withheld is as much a part of the exhibition's contribution as what was eventually displayed.
For urban historians, the Pathare Prabhu exhibition raises questions that extend beyond the specific community. Mumbai's built environment has undergone successive phases of demolition and redevelopment that have severed many communities from the physical spaces where their collective memory was anchored. The mill districts of the central city, the older chawl neighbourhoods of Dadar and Parel, the demolished Gaudry colony near Dharavi — all represent histories that exist primarily in the memories of those who lived through the changes and in whatever documents survived the transitions. The museum's willingness to serve as a repository for those documents, on terms that the communities themselves negotiate, offers a model that other institutions in the city have been watching with interest.
The institutional context matters. CSMVS, established in the early twentieth century and renamed in 2011 to honour Shivaji Maharaj rather than the British governor whose name it previously bore, has for decades operated within a collection model inherited from colonial-era museum practice. Its collections of Mughal miniatures, Tibetan thangka paintings, and Indus Valley artifacts reflect the curatorial priorities of an institution whose original mandate was to preserve and display the material culture of the subcontinent's rulers and its ancient civilisations. The Pathare Prabhu exhibition represents a different proposition: that a museum with national pretensions can also serve as a house of community memory, and that those two functions need not be in competition.
The stakes of the project are not confined to the Pathare Prabhu community or even to Mumbai. Across Indian cities, the question of who controls the documentation of neighbourhood histories has become increasingly acute as redevelopment pressure intensifies. Residents of neighbourhoods facing demolition often find that the official historical record — the version that planning authorities consult, that heritage conservation bodies assess, that courts use to determine whether a building merits protection — reflects the perspective of property owners, municipal archives, and colonial-era surveys rather than the lived experience of the people who actually inhabited the spaces. Community-sourced exhibitions, when they succeed, create a parallel record that cannot be easily dismissed.
What the CSMVS exhibition cannot do, and does not pretend to do, is resolve the fundamental tension between preservation and access. Every family archive contains materials that members consider too sensitive for public display. Every community has elders whose knowledge of the past has never been written down and who may not live to transmit it. The exhibition captures a moment — a specific set of objects, a specific set of negotiations, a specific set of stories told by a specific group of contributors — and presents it as a working document rather than a completed history. Whether that approach serves the community's long-term interests depends partly on whether the museum follows up with further documentation projects, on whether it digitises what was displayed so that it remains accessible, and on whether it builds the kind of institutional relationship that would allow other communities to consider a similar collaboration.
Mumbai's heritage politics have long been shaped by competing claims about what the city's history is for. Developers and planning authorities tend to treat the built environment as a resource to be optimised; heritage advocates treat it as evidence to be preserved; residents treat it as the texture of their daily lives. The CSMVS project sits at the intersection of those perspectives in a way that is revealing, though not yet conclusive. It suggests that at least some institutional actors within the city's cultural infrastructure are willing to treat community memory as a legitimate form of knowledge rather than simply as a sentimental resource. Whether that willingness survives the pressures of budget cycles, competing curatorial priorities, and the inevitable frictions of collaborative work remains to be seen.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chhatrapati_Shivaji_Maharaj_Vastu_Sangrahalaya
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pathare_Prabhu
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mumbai