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・ Breaking the Ethers
・ Breaking the Fourth Wall (album)
・ Breaking the Frame
・ Breaking the Game
・ Breaking the Girl
・ Breaking the Habit
・ Breaking the Habit (film)
・ Breaking the Habit (video album)
・ Breaking the Ice
・ Breaking the Ice (1938 film)
・ Breaking the Ice (organization)
・ Breaking the Ice (role-playing game)
・ Breaking the Language Barrier
・ Breaking the Law
・ Breaking the News
Breaking the News (painting)
・ Breaking the Real Axis of Evil
・ Breaking the Rules
・ Breaking the Rules (film)
・ Breaking the Rules (song)
・ Breaking the Silence
・ Breaking the Silence (album)
・ Breaking the Silence (EP)
・ Breaking the Silence (film)
・ Breaking the Silence (Firewind song)
・ Breaking the Silence (non-governmental organization)
・ Breaking the silence NSW
・ Breaking the Spell
・ Breaking the Spell (film)
・ Breaking the Surface


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Breaking the News (painting) : ウィキペディア英語版
Breaking the News (painting)

''Breaking the News'' is an 1887 painting by Australian artist John Longstaff. It shows the interior of a miner's cottage on the goldfields with an old man breaking the news to a woman of her husband's death. The woman holds an infant in her arms, and two other miners appear in the doorway, carrying the body of the husband on a stretcher. Behind them in the distance stands the mine's headframe. ''Breaking the News'' became etched in the popular imagination, and by the 1890s was "known by reproduction in every mining township in Australia".〔''The Argus'', 29 June 1895〕
''The Argus'' described it as "a vivid and accurate presentment of a familiar incident in Australian life".〔''The Argus'', 19 April 1887.〕 Only one month after the painting was first exhibited in Melbourne, eighty-one coal miners perished in a gas explosion at the Bulli Mine in New South Wales. Australia's worst below-ground gold mining disaster, the New Australasian Gold Mine disaster, occurred on 12 December 1882 in Creswick, less than twenty kilometres from Longstaff's hometown of Clunes. According to biographer Nina Murdoch, Longstaff's childhood memory of a mining fatality was the direct inspiration for ''Breaking the News'': "the day at Clunes, following the tragic ''cortège'' from mine-head to cottage door, he had heard the stricken cry of the young wife at the sight of the stretcher-bearers' burden".〔Murdoch, Nina. ''Portrait in Youth''. Sydney: Angus and Robertson, 1948. pp. 54-55〕
Renowned Australian writer and poet Henry Lawson declared himself a "worshipper" of Longstaff after viewing ''Breaking the News'', and discussed the painting's sentimental and social impact at length in an 1899 essay for ''The Bulletin'' titled "If I Could Paint", concluding that he'd "be prouder of a picture like ''Breaking the News'' than of a hundred exquisite alleged studies in the "nood"."〔Lawson, Henry (11 November 1899). "If I Could Paint", ''The Bulletin''.〕 The following year, ''The Bulletin'' co-founder and then-owner of ''Breaking the News'', J. F. Archibald, commissioned Longstaff to paint a portrait of Lawson. Archibald greatly admired the portrait, prompting him to set up a bequest for the Archibald Prize, now Australia's most prestigious prize for portraiture.〔(Henry Lawson (1900) by John Longstaff ), Art Gallery of New South Wales. Retrieved 26 November 2012.〕 Longstaff went on to win the Archibald five times.〔
''Breaking the News'' was the inspiration for a 1912 film of the same name. Directed by W. J. Lincoln and shot near Melbourne, it depicts the flooding of an underground mine and daring attempts to rescue the miners. The film was a commercial success and received favourable reviews from critics. It is now considered a lost film.
''Breaking the News'' was acquired by the Art Gallery of Western Australia in 1933.〔(Breaking the News ), Art Gallery of Western Australia. Retrieved 26 November 2012.〕
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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