
Henrique Alvim Corrêa's Dead London Devastated by Martians – War of the Worlds 1906
From the celebrated 1906 Belgian edition of H.G. Wells' 'The War of the Worlds,' this haunting pen-and-ink illustration by Brazilian artist Henrique Alvim Corrêa depicts a shattered London in the aftermath of Martian devastation. A towering alien fighting machine looms amid collapsed structures, tangled cables, and scattered human remains. The sepia-toned composition conveys desolate silence — a city emptied of life, overrun by extraterrestrial invaders, rendered with extraordinary detail and atmospheric dread unique to Corrêa's masterful interpretive style.
Closer to a silent museum than an exploding space station — the horror is rendered in stillness and desolation rather than explosive action. The spectacle is profound and unsettling, the devastation implied rather than screamed.
“Dead London devastated by the Martian attack.”





