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・ Men of War
・ Men of war
・ Men of War (comics)
・ Men of War (film)
・ Men of War (series)
・ Men of Yesterday
・ Men on a Mission
・ Men on Her Mind
・ Men on the Bridge
・ Men on the Sea Floor
・ Men on...
・ Men Only
・ Men Opening Umbrellas Ahead
・ Men or Not Men
・ Men Prefer Fat Girls
Men Reading
・ Men Sam An
・ Men Should Weep
・ Men Shouldn't Sing
・ Men si tarsil
・ Men Suddenly in Black
・ Men Suddenly in Love
・ Men Who Have Made Love to Me
・ Men who have sex with men
・ Men who have sex with men blood donor controversy
・ Men who have sex with men blood donor controversy in the United Kingdom
・ Men Who Save the World
・ Men Who Speak Up Main Event
・ Men Will Be Men
・ Men with Broken Hearts


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Men Reading : ウィキペディア英語版
Men Reading

''Men Reading'' or ''The Reading'' (Spanish: ''La Lectura'') or ''Politicians'' are names given〔Goya did not title any of the works in this series, the name come variously from his children, art historians, restorers, curators〕 to a fresco painting likely completed between 1820–1823〔Licht, 159〕 by the Spanish artist Francisco Goya. It is one of Goya's 14 "Black Paintings" (''Pinturas negras'') painted late in his life when, living alone in physical pain, spiritual torment and disillusionment with the political direction of Spain, he painted 14 bleak, agonised frescoes onto the walls of the Quinta del sordo (''House of the deaf man''), the house he was living in alone outside Madrid.
As with the others in the series, it was transferred to canvas in 1873-74 under the supervision of Salvador Martínez Cubells, a curator at the Museo del Prado. The owner, Baron Emile d'Erlanger, donated the work to the Spanish state in 1881, and they are now on display at the Prado.〔Hughes, 16–17〕
==Description==
''Men Reading'' shows a group of six men huddled together reading a printed page held in the lap of a seated central figure. Although it is not known for certain, they are often thought to be politicians reading, and passing comments on, a newspaper article about themselves. Goya most likely placed the work on a smaller wall of the first floor of the Quinto, next to its companion piece ''Women Laughing'' and opposite ''The Dog'' and ''Two Old Men Eating Soup''.〔Junquera, 43〕
X-ray reveals that the image was dramatically altered before Goya settled on what is now on the canvas. At some stage a landscape in the background showed a mounted rider. The central figure in white at one point had large horns, or possibly bird wings, seemingly growing out of his head.〔Junquera, 78〕 From studying the x-rays art historian Carmen Garrido discovered that the center of the image contained a large white lead impasto beginning at the head of the man looking upwards, and that "both the part on top of the impasto and that which is level with the rest of the painting are identical, and have neither the texture nor the normal structure of the authentic brushstrokes of the painter."〔
Thematically and stylistically it shares characteristics with another work from the "Black Paintings" series, ''Women Laughing''. Both are vertical rather than horizontal and smaller in scale than the other works. Both are thematically less dark than the other works in the series, although they are chromatically darker.〔Fernández, G. "(Goya: The Black Paintings )". theartwolf.com, August 2006. Retrieved 15 January 2010.〕 Both are lit by identical light falling from the upper left of the pictorial space. ''Women Laughing'' shows two hags mocking a man in the act of masturbating, while in ''Men reading'', according to writer Francisco-Xavier de Salas Bosch, "the incessant talk of the politicians...was perhaps, in Goya’s eyes, as sterile as the solitary pleasure which the women are making fun of."〔de Salas Bosch〕


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