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Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – Neuville & Riou, c.1871 Hetzel Edition
Drawn directly from Jules Verne's landmark 1870 novel 'Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea,' this dramatic pen-and-ink engraving captures a scene of violent struggle or sudden collapse aboard the Nautilus, with two figures entangled in desperate physical conflict or exhaustion amidst a scholar's den of tumbled books and billowing curtains. A masked or helmeted figure looms ominously at left. The engraving's fierce cross-hatching and theatrical composition exemplify the Neuville-Riou visual language that defined Verne's work for generations.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Alphonse de Neuville and Édouard Riou
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 5/10
Two men, one mysterious figure, and a floor full of scattered books — someone's study just became a crime scene 20,000 leagues down. Verne's undersea drama rendered in crackling Victorian steel.
Tags:
underseaexplorationmad-sciencetwo struggling figuresmysterious masked figurescattered booksbookshelfdraped curtainsinterior cabinunconscious mandramatic lightingJules VerneTwenty Thousand LeaguesHetzel editionVictorian engravingNeuvilleRiouNautilusundersea adventure19th century book illustrationFrench science fictionmasked figurecabin interior





