
0 views
Share:Save
Henrique Alvim Corrêa's 'The Red Weed' – War of the Worlds 1906
Surprisingly intimate for an alien invasion narrative, this illustration depicts no Martians at all — only their insidious calling card: the red weed consuming an abandoned room. Scattered books, an overturned bag, and a ransacked writing desk speak to a humanity fled or destroyed. Corrêa's masterly pencil-and-ink draftsmanship renders the creeping alien vegetation with botanical precision, transforming a domestic interior into a haunting monument to civilization's fragility under extraterrestrial siege.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Henrique Alvim Corrêa
Era: Edwardian (1901-1914)
Decade: 1900s
Country: Belgium
Coolness: 3/10
Restrained to the point of melancholy — no tentacles, no heat-rays, just a desk quietly being eaten by Martian shrubbery. The horror here is entirely in the implication, which is somehow worse.
Tags:
invasionapocalypsealiensalien-worldsalien vegetationabandoned roomwriting deskscattered booksred weedruined interiorMartian invasion aftermathovergrown plantswar of the worldsH.G. WellsAlvim Correared weedMartian invasion1906Belgian editionbook illustrationalien florapost-apocalypticEdwardian sci-fiabandoned interior
Text in image:
“The red weed.”





