Housed in the Kubicki Stables, built between 1825 and 1826, the exhibition presents, relating to the period of the building's construction and use, hippological artefacts from the 19th and 20th centuries.
At that time, riding and harness horses performed important functions in communication, agriculture, police, military and other services, as well as in horse sport, racing and recreation. In 1936, there were about four million horses in Poland and in this respect our country ranked first in Europe.
The exhibition includes a collection of horse-drawn vehicles. Among them are true rarities, such as the calèche carriage and the sporting phaeton stanhope, from the outstanding Viennese firm of Jacob Lohner, who was a supplier of horse-drawn vehicles to the court of Franz Joseph. Also on display are harnesses in the following styles: English, Cracovian, Silesian and Balagula, halters, carriage lanterns, saddles, e.g. by the Warsaw factories of Łukasz Lassota and Ludwik Kazimierski, accessories for riding and harness horses, accessories for riders, carriage drivers, horse breeders, veterinary surgeons and farriers, costumes of people connected with horse breeding and participants in hippy competitions, horse races and hunts.