
Jules Verne's Lunar Explorers Survey the Moon – De la Terre à la Lune, c.1870
Sharing the meticulous cross-hatching lineage of Édouard Riou's celebrated Verne engravings, this dramatic night scene depicts three Victorian-era explorers conducting scientific observations on the barren lunar surface, their bullet-shaped projectile capsule partially embedded in the rocky terrain behind them. A telescope-equipped observer scans the star-filled black sky from a rocky promontory while companions record data below. The absence of atmosphere is palpable — stark, airless, and geologically alien — hallmarks of Bayard and Neuville's precise illustrative collaboration for Hetzel editions.
Restrained and scientifically minded rather than sensational, this engraving would entice a Victorian reader's sense of wonder rather than shock. Its quiet grandeur rewards contemplation over impulse-grabbing spectacle.
“Emile Bayard”





