
Albert Robida's Armored War Machines, La Vie Électrique (c.1890)
Like Robida's celebrated illustrations for La Guerre au Vingtième Siècle, this striking pen-and-ink plate from La Vie Électrique envisions mechanized future warfare decades before the tank's invention. A massive armored land cruiser — bristling with cannon, observation turrets, and crew — rolls on primitive wheel-tracks through a wooded road, flanked by rifle-bearing bicycle soldiers. A second armored vehicle lurks in the background, while cyclists scout ahead, blending Victorian military dress with breathtaking proto-futurist machine warfare.
A genuinely visionary pre-WWI tank concept rendered with meticulous crosshatch detail — impressive for its era but too restrained and monochrome to leap off a newsstand. Robida's imaginative machinery rewards slow study over immediate visceral impact.
“Michelet, Sc.”





