
0 views
Share:Save
Giant Hands Crush a Traveler — Verne's 'Around the Moon,' Bayard & Neuville, 1870s
Executed by Émile-Antoine Bayard and Henri de Montaut dit Neuville, the French engravers who defined the visual language of Jules Verne's Voyages Extraordinaires, this dramatic pen-and-ink illustration employs masterful chiaroscuro to create a nightmarish dreamscape. An impossibly large curly-haired figure looms over a tiny human trapped within a swirling vortex between enormous grasping hands — a surreal vision of cosmic scale and helplessness that anticipates Symbolist art and pulp horror by decades.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Émile-Antoine Bayard and Henri Neuville
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 7/10
More gothic Gustave Doré than Frank R. Paul — the surreal scale horror and dreamlike menace punch well above Victorian illustration norms, prefiguring pulp nightmare imagery by fifty years.
Tags:
Text in image:
“Bayard Neuville”





