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Monday, September 10, 2012

Bizarre 19th Century postcards reveal how French artists thought we'd be living in 2000

de bene esse: literally, of well-being, morally acceptable but subject to future validation or exception

Sometimes it can be hard to keep up with the pace of chance in modern day society.
But clearly things haven't changed as dramatically as a group of French artists from the 19th Century expected.

A set of postcards designed by the artists - produced between 1899 and 1910 - try to predict what life would be like in Paris in the year 2000.
Odd: A set of postcards designed by French artists - produced between 1899 and 1910 - tried to predict what life would be like in Paris in the year 2000. And bizarrely they thought we would be playing croquet underwater, pictured
Odd: A set of postcards designed by French artists - produced between 1899 and 1910 - tried to predict what life would be like in Paris in the year 2000. And bizarrely they thought we would be playing croquet underwater, pictured

Futuristic: In this image, a woman runs screaming from a burning building with her baby. But instead of fireman clambering up tall ladders to reach her, the brave officers are able to fly
Futuristic: In this image, a woman runs screaming from a burning building with her baby. But instead of fireman clambering up tall ladders to reach her, the brave officers are able to fly

Strange: This postcard shows a group of tourists taking an underwater tour on a bus - pulled by an enormous tame blue whale
Strange: This postcard shows a group of tourists taking an underwater tour on a bus - pulled by an enormous tame blue whale
 
And there are some fairly bizarre scenes, to say the least.
The year 2000 may have been and gone - but no-one has yet invented a flying fireman, or started playing croquet underwater.
 
Another of the quirky postcards shows a group of tourists taking an underwater tour on a bus - pulled by an enormous tame blue whale.

And while Parisians haven’t as yet replaced the fireplace in their homes with sticks of glowing radium, as one portrait shows, there are some portraits which aren’t too far off the mark.
Different: The postcards, distributed widely around France in cigarette boxes at the turn of the last century, were produced by Jean-Marc Cote, and various other artists. This shows an odd version of a helicopter
Different: The postcards, distributed widely around France in cigarette boxes at the turn of the last century, were produced by Jean-Marc Cote, and various other artists. This shows an odd version of a helicopter

Imaginative: The first series were produced for the 1900 World Exhibition in Paris - and were so popular that eventually 87 different cards were produced.
Imaginative: The first series were produced for the 1900 World Exhibition in Paris - and were so popular that eventually 87 different cards were produced. As well as predicting underwater croquet, the artists also thought flying tennis would be a game

Proved right: Some of the postcards are not so ridiculous - and the artists even appear to have invented an early form of modern technology. Pictured is a video phone
Proved right: Some of the postcards are not so ridiculous - and the artists even appear to have invented an early form of modern technology. Pictured is a video phone
 
The artists have predicted the invention of video phone calls - and of a ‘talking newspaper’ - just like radio news.

The postcards, distributed widely around France in cigarette boxes at the turn of the last century, were produced by Jean-Marc Cote, and various other artists.

The first series were produced for the 1900 World Exhibition in Paris - and were so popular that eventually 87 different cards were produced.

All adorned with the phrase ‘En L’an 2000’ - ‘In the year 2000’ - they range from the extraordinary to the revolutionary.

In one image, a woman runs screaming from a burning building with her baby.
But instead of fireman clambering up tall ladders to reach her, the brave officers all have bat-style wings attached to their backs - and are easily able to swoop up to the high window to save the day.
Interesting: Despite farming having shown many advances over the years, it is not quite as modern as the artists expected in this postcard
Interesting: Despite farming having shown many advances over the years, it is not quite as modern as the artists expected in this postcard

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