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
Untitled (horse without rider, dead soldier on ground)
Skip to main content
Expand
Favorite
View PDF
Untitled (horse without rider, dead soldier on ground)
Previous
Next
N.C. Wyeth
(American, 1882 - 1945)
Untitled (horse without rider, dead soldier on ground)
Graphite and ink on paper
1902
5 11/16 × 8 5/8 in. (14.4 × 21.9 cm)
SUPP2000.2246.359
The Andrew and Betsy Wyeth Collection
Not on view
Discover More
untitled (horse and rider scared by firecrackers)
N.C. Wyeth
1900 / 1901
Untitled (horse throwing rider; verso, man with arms folded)
N.C. Wyeth
prior to 1902
Untitled (horse and rider)
N.C. Wyeth
Prior to 1902
"But, Father, I can't go to Rob without clothes, like a beggar girl. I wish I were dead"
N.C. Wyeth
1914
Image Not Available
for Untitled (studies of a horse face, mounted rider and hand holding rein)
Untitled (studies of a horse face, mounted rider and hand holding rein)
N.C. Wyeth
ca. 1942
Election Night (in the country), outline drawing; verso, study of a horse and rider, Indian and horse, hand holding a pistol)
N.C. Wyeth
Prior to 1902
Untitled (bareback rider; verso, bucking horse)
N.C. Wyeth
Prior to 1902
Untitled (two hunters with dead duck, confronted by farmer)
N.C. Wyeth
ca. 1895 / 1900
untitled (George Washington on horse, leading Revolutionary-era foot soldiers into battle)
N.C. Wyeth
not dated
Image Not Available
for Untitled (horse and rider)
Untitled (horse and rider)
N.C. Wyeth
Prior to 1902
Untitled illustration for "Wail of the Wandering Dead"
Howard Pyle
ca. 1900
Marfa, seized by two soldiers, was forced on her knees on the ground.
N.C. Wyeth
1927