Sarmaya's debut exhibition opened in January 2018 with
Portrait of a Nation, a collection of rare 19th century photography from the Indian subcontinent. The show was curated by photographer Madhavan Pillai and designed by conservationist Abha Narain Lamba highlighted connections between the evolution of photography and the political landscape in India. Photographers featured included
Raja Deen Dayal,
Samuel Bourne,
Felice Beato and Thomas Biggs. In August 2021, Sarmaya partnered with TARQ art gallery to stage the show
Shifting Selves - Between meaning, mythology & mirage in
Colaba, Mumbai. It centred around the themes of identity and self contained in the works of artists Saju Kunhan, Saubiya Chasmawala and Rithika Merchant. Their art was accompanied by other objects from Sarmaya's collection of 19th-century photography, numismatics and indigenous and contemporary Indian art. The exhibition also included a digital art installation by Gaurav Ogale and Farah Mulla. In November 2022, Sarmaya partnered with Ojas Art in Delhi to stage the show
Echoes of the Land - Art bears witness to a changing planet in
Mehrauli. The exhibition featured contemporary Indian artists, most of whom practice traditional arts related to
Mithila,
Gond,
Warli,
Bhil and other indigenous communities. The paintings, all part of the Sarmaya collection, included works by Ram Singh Urveti, Krishnanand Jha, Mayur and Tushar Vayeda,
Zarina Hashmi, Gopa Trivedi and Sanjay Chitara. The exhibition explored themes like
climate-change,
pollution,
species extinction and other issues of the
Anthropocene, through Indian art. In January 2025, Sarmaya launched the exhibition 'High Seas, Open Roads' at its Mumbai archive. The travel-themed show featured, among other objects, the zodiac coins of Mughal emperor
Jahangir, the travelogues of
Robert Melville Grindlay and
Fanny Parkes, 19th-century photographs by
Samuel Bourne, and art by Rithika Merchant, Mayur and Tushar Vayeda, Saju Kunhan and Sindhe Chithambara Rao. In March 2025, the nature-themed show 'In The Dappled Light' opened at Sarmaya. Among the exhibits were folios of illustrations from the
Hortus Malabaricus,
Century of Birds by
John Gould, 'Illustrations of Himalayan Plants' by
JD Hooker Plantae Asiaticae Rariores by
Nathaniel Wallich, and 'Indian Botany' by
Robert Wight. Also showcased were indigenous Indian art from the
Gond,
Mithila,
Kalamkari,
Warli, Bengal
Pattachitra and
miniature painting traditions by artists including,
Japani Shyam, Mayank Shyam,
Dulari Devi, Jonnalagadda Niranjan, Amit Dombhare, Tagar Chitrakar and Gopa Trivedi. == Films ==