It's finally coming home. An original print of Yousef Karsh's renowned portrait of Winston Churchill — a photo known as The Roaring Lion — was officially handed over to Canadian authorities at ...
The theft of an iconic Churchill portrait by Yousuf Karsh went unnoticed for months. But two years later, the police have tracked down the photograph. By Ian Austen Like many people in Ottawa ...
The 1941 portrait of the British leader taken by Ottawa photographer Yousuf Karsh is now ready for the last step of its journey home to the Fairmont Château Laurier, the hotel in Ottawa where it ...
The 1941 image by Armenian photographer Yousuf Karsh appeared on the cover of Life magazine and is now featured on Britain’s five-pound note. Karsh took the photograph after Churchill delivered ...
After almost three years in Europe, Yousuf Karsh’s stolen, wartime portrait of Winston Churchill is finally heading home, to Canada. At an official ceremony on Thursday morning at the Canadian ...
The photo - known as "the Roaring Lion" - was taken by Yousuf Karsh shortly after Churchill gave a wartime speech to Canada's parliament. A staff member at the Château Laurier hotel first noticed ...
CBC's Paul Hunter, who took a photo that helped investigators as they tried to pinpoint when the famed portrait was stolen, was in Rome as the Yousuf Karsh photograph was returned to Canadian ...
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It's finally coming home. Yousef Karsh's famed portrait of the late British prime minister Winston Churchill — a photo known as The Roaring Lion — will officially be returned to Canadian authorities, ...