
Henrique Alvim Corrêa: First Martian Emerges from Cylinder, War of the Worlds 1906
At the dawn of imperial anxiety, when Britain feared invasion as much as it dreamed of conquest, H.G. Wells gave shape to civilizational dread. Corrêa's masterful pen-and-ink captures the raw horror of first contact: a tentacled Martian heaves itself from its landed cylinder as two terrified Victorians flee across churned earth. The composition is masterfully off-balance, the alien grotesque yet almost pitiful, embodying Wells' vision of humanity rendered suddenly, catastrophically small.
The image crackles with visceral tension — a lurching alien horror, panicked humans, and a smoldering craft of alien engineering. Though rendered in refined Victorian pen-and-ink rather than garish pulp color, the raw dramatic staging and monster-emergence scenario is pure proto-pulp spectacle.
“The first Martian emerges from the cylinder.”





