
Alvim Corrêa's Martian Devastation Scene – War of the Worlds 1906
Subverting the triumphalist adventure genre, this raw pen-and-ink scene captures the chaos and human vulnerability at the heart of H.G. Wells's alien invasion narrative. Two disheveled figures stumble through rubble-strewn wreckage — one pointing urgently toward an unseen threat — conveying panic and disorientation with economic, slashing linework. Henrique Alvim Corrêa's loose, expressionistic draftsmanship eschews spectacle for psychological realism, making the human terror of Martian invasion feel immediate and visceral.
The scene packs considerable narrative tension into a single frame — two survivors in a destroyed environment, one gesturing urgently — but the restrained, sketch-like linework keeps the energy grounded rather than explosive. The drama is psychological rather than spectacle-driven.
“Alvim Correa”





