It depends on what you're citing:
* If you're citing the book itself: Yes, you absolutely cite the book. You'd use a standard citation format (like MLA, APA, Chicago, etc.) to give credit to the author and source.
* If you're citing information from the book that's *displayed* in the exhibit: You'd need to consider the following:
* Is the information in the exhibit original to the book, or is it common knowledge? If it's common knowledge (like "The Earth is round."), you don't need to cite the book. But if it's specific information from the book, you do.
* Is the exhibit attributed to the book? If the exhibit clearly says "From the book..." or uses a similar phrase, that's a strong signal that you should cite the book.
* Is the exhibit curatorial information? If the exhibit text is written by the museum or exhibit creators, you would cite that instead of the book, even if it's drawing from the book's information.
Please tell me more!
To give you the most accurate answer, please provide me with:
* What is the specific information you're citing?
* What is the exhibit's context? (Museum, art gallery, temporary exhibit, etc.)
* Is the exhibit clearly attributed to the book?
Let me know, and I can help you figure out the best way to cite the information!