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A propos de l'auteur
Albert Robida (14 May 1848 - 11 October 1926) was a French illustrator, caricaturist, novelist and editor whose imagination yoked medieval nostalgia to audacious visions of the machine age-and of mechanised war. A carpenter's son from Compiègne, he exchanged notarial drudgery for the Parisian press, cöfounding the weekly La Caricature (1880¿92) and ultimately producing some 60,000 drawings and eighty books, inspiring one critic to call him "an inexhaustible dynamo."Robida's renown rests on three graphic novels that mapped the coming century: The Twentieth Century (1883), War in the Twentieth Century (1887) and Electric Life (1890). Delighting readers with air¿taxis, videophones and emancipated women, they also forecast the darker face of progress. War in the Twentieth Century depicts fleets of armoured airships bombarding cities, mobile artillery slinging poison shells and wireless "telephotographs" directing fire-devices chillingly close to the zeppelins, gas and aerial reconnaissance of 1914¿18. His later serial La Guerre Infernale (1908) pushed the vision further, showing orbiting gun¿platforms and continent¿spanning alliances that eerily pre¿echo the total wars of the twentieth century. Historians now credit Robida-long overshadowed by Jules Verne-as the first illustrator¿novelist to give war its modern technological grammar.Yet his futurism was never mere technophilia; it was tempered by gentle satire and a preservationist's love of heritage. He mocked gadget¿drunk Parisians even as he designed the hugely popular "Vieux Paris" medieval quarter for the 1900 Exposition Universelle, warning that unfettered progress could hollow out the past. This tension between wonder and caution suffuses his work, where rococo façades cling to flying hotels and Notre¿Dame doubles as an aerodrome.Robida's private life was as modest as his art was extravagant. Near¿sighted and shy, he sketched from suburban Neuilly while raising seven children, yet delivered illustrations and text with clockwork punctuality. The First World War, which claimed his youngest son and confirmed his most ominous predictions, darkened his outlook. Although his ornate cross¿hatching slipped from fashion after 1918, later critics hailed him as "the Jules Verne of illustration," recognising that his fusion of word and image-especially his clairvoyant visions of industrialised conflict-helped ordinary readers imagine, and fear, the twentieth century before it arrived.