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  2. Sep 30, 2023 · The origins of Gandhi’s image on Indian currency. The portrait of Gandhi visible on banknotes isn’t a caricature. It’s cut-out of a photograph taken in 1946, where he is standing with British politician Lord Frederick William Pethick-Lawrence.

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  3. Oct 2, 2015 · It was taken at the former Viceroy House, which is now known as the Rashtrapati Bhavan. The mirror image of the original picture has been used on the Mahatma Gandhi Series of bank notes. Photo Credit: Pranav Yaddanapudi/ Flickr. The series of notes was introduced by the Reserve Bank of India in 1996. Photo Credit: Miran Rijavec/ Flickr.

  4. Sep 10, 2014 · In typed notes that accompanied Bourke-White’s film when it was sent from India to LIFE’s New York offices in the spring of 1946, the significance of the simple spinning wheel in the photo is...

    • Where was the picture of Mahatma Gandhi taken?1
    • Where was the picture of Mahatma Gandhi taken?2
    • Where was the picture of Mahatma Gandhi taken?3
    • Where was the picture of Mahatma Gandhi taken?4
    • Where was the picture of Mahatma Gandhi taken?5
  5. She made hundreds of photographs, including many of Gandhi himself: with his family; at his spinning wheel; at prayer. More than a dozen of her pictures ran in the “Leaders” article in the May ’46 issue. Only two were of Gandhi, and neither of them was the well-known spinning-wheel picture.

    • Where was the picture of Mahatma Gandhi taken?1
    • Where was the picture of Mahatma Gandhi taken?2
    • Where was the picture of Mahatma Gandhi taken?3
    • Where was the picture of Mahatma Gandhi taken?4
    • Where was the picture of Mahatma Gandhi taken?5
  6. Oct 3, 2023 · The image of Mahatma Gandhi that we see on Indian currency notes isn’t a drawing or painting; it’s a cut-out from a photograph taken in 1946. In this photo, Gandhi is standing with British politician Lord Frederick William Pethick-Lawrence, and it captured Gandhi’s smiling expression, which was seen as the most suitable for the currency.

  7. Oct 7, 2016 · The actual smiling picture was taken when Mahatma Gandhi was once standing next to the Lord Fredrick Pethick Lawrence. Yes, you certainly read it right. Also check out the photograph below.

  8. After Gandhi’s assassination in January 30, 1948, the photograph was given pride of place in LIFE’s multiple-page tribute to Gandhi. Filling a half-page atop the article, “India Loses Her ‘Great Soul,'” the picture serves as a stirring visual eulogy to the man and his ideals.