
Alvim Corrêa's Devastated Countryside, War of the Worlds 1906
A haunting stillness pervades this masterful pen-and-ink landscape from Alvim Corrêa's celebrated 1906 Belgian edition of H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds. Weeping willows draped with alien, viscous tendrils frame a flooded, desolate river valley where collapsed structures and toppled windmills hint at catastrophic Martian destruction. The scene blurs the boundary between Earth's familiar pastoral world and an alien-transformed nightmare, rendered with extraordinary crosshatching detail that makes the vegetation feel unnervingly organic and wrong.
The most unsettling detail is the weeping willow trees whose trailing fronds have been transformed into dripping, tentacle-like tendrils, suggesting the Martian Red Weed has begun assimilating Earth's native flora into something alien and grotesque.
“Alv.m. Corrêa”





