
Henrique Alvim Corrêa's Martian Tripod – War of the Worlds 1906 Belgian Edition
Henrique Alvim Corrêa, the Brazilian-born illustrator whose dark, expressionistic pen-and-ink work defined the visual language of H.G. Wells' alien invasion, delivers a haunting chapter header for 'Livre Premier: L'arrivée des Marsiens.' A towering Martian tripod dominates the composition, its mechanical spider-legs and glowing heat-ray beam cutting through a smoke-choked, apocalyptic industrial landscape. Corrêa's signature scratchy linework and dramatic chiaroscuro create overwhelming dread, with fleeing figures dwarfed beneath the unstoppable machine.
More Gustave Doré's apocalyptic Bible engravings than pulp magazine flash — this is darkness and dread over lurid excitement, but the towering tripod and heat-ray push it firmly into high-spectacle terror territory.
“Livre Premier L'arrivée des Marsiens Book I. The Coming of the Martians.”





