Moon Goddess Allegory — Émile Bayard's Engraving for Verne's 'Autour de la Lune' 1870
1 view
Share:Save

Moon Goddess Allegory — Émile Bayard's Engraving for Verne's 'Autour de la Lune' 1870

A Victorian reader cracking open Jules Verne's lunar sequel would have been stopped cold by this haunting frontispiece — a robed celestial figure, her head replaced by the luminous, swirling face of the Moon itself, rising serenely above a bed of clouds in a star-scattered night sky. The anthropomorphized Moon goddess blends classical allegory with scientific wonder, rendered in breathtaking wood engraving cross-hatching. It perfectly captures Verne's tone: cosmic awe dressed in 19th-century Romantic grandeur.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Émile Bayard
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 4/10

Restrained and classically elegant rather than pulp-lurid, this belongs in a museum case beside a first Hetzel edition. Its surrealist moon-headed figure is quietly uncanny in a way that predates Magritte by half a century.

Text in image:

Hildibrandts [lower left, partial/unclear] Emil Bayard [lower right signature]

More Book Illustration