
Robida's Paris of the Future: Automobile Chaos & Monorail, c.1900
A turn-of-the-century viewer would have gasped at this dizzying vision of tomorrow's Paris — thrillingly familiar yet gloriously unhinged. Albert Robida's panoramic chromolithograph depicts a chaotic futuristic cityscape where horseless automobiles crash and tangle in the foreground, a sleek electric monorail glides overhead on skeletal steel gantries, dirigibles drift above Gothic spires, and crowds swarm a grand public square. The collision of old Haussmann architecture with screaming modern technology captures the era's euphoric anxiety about speed, machinery, and urban life.
This belongs firmly in a museum of speculative illustration — Robida's meticulous architectural detail and satirical wit elevate it far above pulp sensationalism. Yet the gleeful automobile pile-up and swarming chaos give it just enough kinetic madness to thrill a dorm room wall.





