The exhibition will be thrown open to public only from tomorrow, after its formal inauguration by Congress president Sonia Gandhi this evening.
"Altogether 220 photographs have been selected for this exhibition out of nearly 90,000 that we are in possession of," Secretary of the Indira Gandhi Memorial Trust (IGMT), New Delhi, Suman Dubey, told reporters here.
"This commemorative photo exhibition will, during the course of next year, be held in various cities like Mumbai, Kolkata and Bengaluru and finally at New Delhi on November 19 when the centenary celebrations would come to a close.
He said the criteria adopted for choosing the pictures from the mammoth collection was the significance of the events portrayed and also the skill of the photographer concerned, many of whom remain unknown.
Placed for display in Swaraj Bhavan, Gandhi's ancestral house where she was born on November 19, 1936 and spent her early life, are several pictures of a young Indira Priyadarshini, the name given to her by her father Jawaharlal Nehru, some of them solo while in others she is flanked by her parents.
In another photograph she shares the frame with Nehru and Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose.
There are also photographs clicked at the time of her
marriage to fiery Congress leader Feroze Gandhi. Besides, there is a rare photograph of the family of her husband, taken before he was born.
Another fascinating picture has three former Prime Ministers in one frame - Nehru, Indira, and a young Rajiv Gandhi in her lap.
There are also many photographs depicting her political journey, including her swearing-in as a minister in the government headed by Lal Bahadur Shastri, her visit -- as Prime Minister -- to Pokhran when India conducted its first nuclear test, and various events leading to the truncation of Pakistan and formation of Bangladesh, which established her image as a "tough" leader.
The move was said to have backfired and triggered a sympathy wave in favour of the late Congress leader who stormed back to power in 1980, barely three years after she suffered a crushing defeat in the general elections upon the lifting of Emergency.
Upon her return to power, Gandhi remained the Prime Minister until her assassination on October 31, 1984.
Quite a few pictures also provide a glimpse into the former PM's artistic, literary and religious inclinations.
There are photographs of her with singer Lata Mangeshkar and poet Jaan Nisaar Akhtar.
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