
Henrique Alvim Corrêa's Abandoned Typewriter, War of the Worlds 1906
Executed in expressive pen-and-ink with vigorous cross-hatching and loose, energetic linework, this illustration by Henrique Alvim Corrêa depicts a typewriter overgrown and abandoned amid encroaching alien vegetation — almost certainly the red weed of H.G. Wells' Martian invasion. The swirling tendrils erupt from the keyboard in chaotic profusion, suggesting civilization's tools consumed by extraterrestrial biology. The scattered papers and pencil reinforce the collapse of human order, rendered with Corrêa's characteristically dramatic, slightly unhinged draftsmanship.
A quietly haunting image — civilization's most mundane tool swallowed by alien biology. Corrêa's restless linework transforms a still life into a symbol of humanity's defeat, earning its place as one of the more unsettling vignettes in his celebrated 1906 Wells edition.
“Alvim-Corrêa”





