
Martian Tripod Over Village Streets — H.G. Wells War of the Worlds 1906
Before you stands one of the most viscerally unsettling illustrations from Henrique Alvim Corrêa's landmark 1906 Belgian edition of H.G. Wells's 'La Guerre des Mondes.' A towering Martian fighting machine looms over a cowering village, its spindly mechanical legs descending from a dark, flat-topped hull dripping with fluid, dwarfing the clustered rooftops below. Corrêa's masterful pen-and-ink draftsmanship captures both monumental alien menace and the terrifying vulnerability of human civilization beneath it.
Corrêa's work transcends pulp convention with genuine artistic sophistication, yet the sheer visceral drama of the looming tripod and dripping hull pushes the spectacle firmly into high-energy territory. The illustration achieves its fever-dream quality through composition rather than crudeness, making it one of the most accomplished pieces of early science fiction art.





