
Édouard Riou's Aerial Bombardment from Flying Basket — Jules Verne, 1880s
Victorian readers encountering this engraving would have felt a vertiginous thrill — primitive figures hurling explosives from a suspended aerial basket onto warriors clambering through a massive baobab tree, smoke bursting between the branches. Riou's masterful cross-hatching conjures a savage colonial fantasy of technological supremacy over nature and man. The chaotic scatter of falling bodies and panicked figures below ground the spectacle in kinetic violence, blending ethnographic exoticism with proto-science-fiction aerial warfare.
Restrained by Victorian engraving conventions but genuinely thrilling in concept — aerial bombardment by basket-suspended attackers over a giant tree is spectacularly weird. Museum-worthy craftsmanship with a pulp soul lurking beneath the crosshatching.
“Riou”





