Popular Culture Review Vol. 25, No. 1, Winter 2014 | Page 102

98 Popular Culture Review for the new bank notes. Modeled on his wife, Lady Hazel Lavery, and depicted in Irish national costume, the popular image of Lady Lavery appeared on the first note series (1928) and continued to feature on Irish national currency into the 1970s. She appears in several profiles; one includes her arm resting on an Irish harp. The Central Bank of Ireland, £1 note. Hazel Lavery as Cathleen ni Houlihan. Lavery’s biographer notes, “As if in reaction to his services to the Empire, Sir John and Lady Lavery ‘rediscovered’ a somewhat romanticized version of their Irish roots during the 1920s; but this led to a genuine engagement with the topical question of Home Rule, and Lavery painted several portraits of Irish Republican figures [...]” (McConkey). The folk costume, national instrument, and landscape all contribute to national idealizations of Irishness, distinct features of Irish cultural heritage that distinguished Ireland from England, whose currency was standard before independce. The selection of national “heroes” on currency is fairly mainstream. South Africa’s currency includes former president Nelson Mandela^ on the front of the RIO, R20, R50, RlOO, and R200 notes; the backs of the notes promote the so called “Big Five” national animals.^ Similarly, in 1996 India’s Rupee banknotes began featuring Mahatma Ghandi, India’s premier nationalist leader for independence from Britain; the banknotes have since replaced all other legal tender currency in India.