Brandywine
Conservancy
Museum
of
Art
Search
Search
Brandywine River Museum of Art
Expand Mobile Search
Search
Search
Menu
Visit
Hours & Admission
Directions
Tours & Groups
Millstone Café
Museum Shop
Visiting with Children
Entertaining
Accessibility
Exhibitions
Current Exhibitions
Upcoming Exhibitions
Past Exhibitions
Collections
About
Historic Artists' Studios
Staff Directory
Jobs & Internships
Museum Blog
Connect With Us
Extended Wyeth Family of Artists
Museum Campus
Support
Events
Breadcrumb
eMuseum
Works
Matters Were Going Ill With Red-Faced Kim Ki
Skip to main content
Expand
Favorite
View PDF
Matters Were Going Ill With Red-Faced Kim Ki
Previous
Next
N.C. Wyeth
(American, 1882 - 1945)
Matters Were Going Ill With Red-Faced Kim Ki
1910
dimensions unavailable
SUPP2000.1957
known by reproduction only
Not on view
Discover More
"I'm not going," Randall told the men in the overcrowded boat. "I'll stick here and when you get to San Francisco ask Cappy Ricks to send a tug out to look for me."
N.C. Wyeth
1923
KI - YI - !!?? -- BING!
N.C. Wyeth
1903 / 1904
"Send him back? Not a bit of it! We're going to hang him higher than Haman"
N.C. Wyeth
1912
"Coming toward the camp was a regulation Santa Claus--red breeches, boots, pack and all. For a minute or two we were too paralyzed to move"
N.C. Wyeth
1927
Image Not Available
for The unflinching firmness with which he faced his assailants, . . . excited a profound respect in the spectators . . .
The unflinching firmness with which he faced his assailants, . . . excited a profound respect in the spectators . . .
N.C. Wyeth
1925
The Glowing Iron Stick in His Hand, Jesse Turned and Faced Squarely the Spot which Held the Watching Man.
N.C. Wyeth
1906
He turned and faced the rising sun, the light full on his face.
N.C. Wyeth
1910
"Schmeckenbecker faced the mob, gallantly shouting his defiance"
N.C. Wyeth
1903
Plate #15 | Then balanced on its powerful tail, | (The feat is awkward, but -- no matter) | Behold the High-browed Cubin-gale, | Much like a Clothes-horse on a platter.
Royal Lacey Scoville
ca. 1915
"The plan is to have your cavalry cut a hole through the Confederate lines, and for me to slip through it . . . put me across to-night and I'll be in Richmond day after to-morrow"
N.C. Wyeth
1912
"I'll drill the first one of you that fires another shot"
N.C. Wyeth
1929
"God's light! I'll question him: ay, and wring an answer from him if I have to put a length of whipcord round his temples! Now go your way," the governor informed him
N.C. Wyeth
ca. 1928