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
The Sea Calls You
Skip to main content
Expand
Favorite
View PDF
The Sea Calls You
Previous
Next
N.C. Wyeth
(American, 1882 - 1945)
The Sea Calls You
1917
approximately 72 × 120 in. (182.9 × 304.8 cm)
SUPP2000.2378
known by reproduction only
Not on view
Discover More
"The sea breeds fighters and that's what I want in the employ of the Blue Star. You two just naturally make me sick at the stomach. Get out!"
N.C. Wyeth
1923
The Farmer's Call to the Colors (Progressive Farmer Magazine, cover illustration)
N.C. Wyeth
1941
Image Not Available
for It was the first time Smoky Face had given that particular call, but the band understood.
It was the first time Smoky Face had given that particular call, but the band understood.
N.C. Wyeth
1917
"The Call Of The Spring"
N.C. Wyeth
1910
The Moose Call
N.C. Wyeth
1904
The Moose Call
N.C. Wyeth
1903 / 1904
An Afternoon Call
Joseph Pennell
1889
The Farmer's Call to the Colors (Progressive Farmer cover illustration), composition drawing
N.C. Wyeth
1941
Curtain Call
Jamie Wyeth
2001
Plate #10 | This weird crustacean, grinning so, | Seems careless of what may befall him. | The Corrugated Bingalo | Is what the nature fakers call him.
Royal Lacey Scoville
ca. 1915
Plate #20 | And look at these hot sports, All three | Are hummers - we might call them Whoopers. | 'Tis evident that they must be | The swift Se-wick-leyian - Loop-the-loopers.
Royal Lacey Scoville
ca. 1915
"Do you mean that you do not care--that you do not hate and despise me? I have never known a woman like you. I have never believed that there were such women."
N.C. Wyeth
1925