Gustave Doré's Sea Monster Attack — Jules Verne Leviathan Engraving — art by Gustave Doré (engraved by H. Pisan) — Vingt mille lieues sous les mers (Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea) or Les Travailleurs de la mer — 1860s
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Gustave Doré's Sea Monster Attack — Jules Verne Leviathan Engraving

Long, whip-like antennae curl skyward from the gaping maw of a colossal physeter — a monstrous whale-like leviathan rising from churning black seas. A lone figure stands resolute on the tilting ship's prow, harpoon raised, while terrified crew members scramble across the listing deck. Seabirds scatter across a storm-darkened sky. The composition masterfully contrasts human fragility against oceanic horror, rendered in Doré's signature crosshatch engraving technique with breathtaking tonal depth and drama.

Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Gustave Doré (engraved by H. Pisan)
Publisher: Hetzel
Decade: 1860s
Country: France
Coolness: 7/10

The sheer scale of the physeter rearing above the helpless ship — antennae lashing, jaws agape — is a spectacular vision of oceanic terror that anticipates a century of monster-at-sea pulp tropes. Doré's ambition in rendering the creature's alien anatomy and the storm's fury is genuinely audacious.

Text in image:

H. PISAN.

Public domain. This vintage illustration is free of known copyright restrictions — free to download, share, and reuse for any purpose.

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