Henrique Alvim Corrêa – War of the Worlds Martian-Ravaged Paris Street, 1906
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Henrique Alvim Corrêa – War of the Worlds Martian-Ravaged Paris Street, 1906

A Belgian reader in 1906 would have felt a cold dread recognizing their own city streets in this image — familiar Haussmann-style facades rendered uncanny, windows glowing like eyes, a domed structure looming like an alien machine overhead, the cobblestones slicked with an eerie reflected light. Henrique Alvim Corrêa's masterful pen-and-ink cross-hatching transforms a Paris boulevard into a post-invasion nightmare, capturing H.G. Wells's Martian apocalypse with suffocating atmospheric tension and proto-expressionist menace.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Henrique Alvim Corrêa
Era: Edwardian (1901-1914)
Decade: 1900s
Country: Belgium
Coolness: 6/10

This belongs firmly in a museum — Corrêa's War of the Worlds illustrations are among the finest speculative fiction art ever produced, closer to Goya than pulp. The brooding atmospheric dread elevates it far above genre illustration into genuine fine art territory.

Text in image:

VANDAMME

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