After the completion of the third phase of renovation at the National Palace Museum in 1985, gallery space at the Museum was expanded. There was an exhibition room that exclusive for the rich collection of the Books and Documents Department, one of three major units of the National Palace Museum. At that time, the work of curating exhibitions on Ching dynasty archives and rare books in the Museum collection began in earnest. The first rotation involved an archives exhibition, which the author of the present article curated. Afterwards, the author has curated exhibitions on historical archives as part of her job, which has spanned twenty years. This has gone on now with an average of one or two exhibitions per year. The contents of the present article deal with the author's experiences in curating these exhibitions, dealing with some of the more well-known or comprehensive exhibitions over the past few years in discussing three issue. The first deal with the fact that historical archives are not works of art and not necessarily aesthetically pleasing as cultural objects, raising the question of why to curate exhibitions on them. If exhibitions need to be curated on archives, then one must fine out how to plan and present them successfully. Finally, the author offers a discussion o n the problems and challenges presented by curating archives exhibitions.