
Henrique Alvim Corrêa – Martian Tripod Stalks Survivor, War of the Worlds 1906
A brooding sepia-and-amber palette drenched in atmospheric dread renders a rain-soaked woodland path lit by the eerie glow of an approaching Martian fighting-machine. Corrêa's masterful tonal ink work silhouettes a desperate human figure cowering in the tree line as a three-legged Tripod looms on the horizon, its flat hood radiating sickly light reflected in the muddy puddles below. Bare winter trees frame the scene like a funeral procession, amplifying the total helplessness of humanity before the Martian invaders.
This one will genuinely unsettle you — Corrêa captures the existential terror of the Martian invasion better than almost any illustrator before or since. Not bombastic pulp, but a slow-burn dread that lingers long after you look away.





